Ants communicate with each other and with other animals using pheromones, sounds,
and touch. The use of pheromones as chemical signals is more developed in ants,
such as the red harvester ant, than in other hymenopteran groups. Like other
insects, ants perceive smells with their long, thin, and mobile antennae. The
paired antennae provide information about the direction and intensity of
scents. Since most ants live on the ground, they use the soil surface to leave
pheromone trails that may be followed by other ants. In species that forage in
groups, a forager that finds food marks a trail on the way back to the colony;
this trail is followed by other ants, these ants then reinforce the trail when
they head back with food to the colony. When the food source is exhausted, no
new trails are marked by returning ants and the scent slowly dissipates. This behaviour
helps ants deal with changes in their environment. For instance, when an
established path to a food source is blocked by an obstacle, the foragers leave
the path to explore new routes. If an ant is successful, it leaves a new trail
marking the shortest route on its return. Successful trails are followed by
more ants, reinforcing better routes and gradually identifying the best path.
Ants use pheromones for more than just making trails. A
crushed ant emits an alarm pheromone that sends nearby ants into an attack
frenzy and attracts more ants from farther away. Several ant species even use
"propaganda pheromones" to confuse enemy ants and make them fight
among themselves.]Pheromones are produced by a wide range of structures
including Dufour's glands, poison glands and glands on the hindgut, pygidium,
rectum, sternum, and hind tibia. Pheromones also are exchanged, mixed with
food, and passed by trophallaxis, transferring information within the colony.
This allows other ants to detect what task group (e.g., foraging or nest
maintenance) other colony members belong to. In ant species with queen castes,
when the dominant queen stops producing a specific pheromone, workers begin to
raise new queens in the colony.
Some ants produce sounds by stridulation, using the gaster
segments and their mandibles. Sounds may be used to communicate with colony
members or with other species.
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