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Honey bee delights in pollen. (Shutterstock photo) |
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Ants carrying lunch. (Photo by J. Lazono, Unsplash) |
Ants: They can do more than lift over ten times their weight. “Not only are ants great at the complex task of foraging and finding their way home with their bounty, but they also engage in agricultural activities that show humans are far from unique in being able to cultivate their own food sources. . . . In 2020, another accidental discovery was made about farmer ants when a photographer happened upon brown ants farming giant oak aphids that live on English oak trees. The ants build barns for the aphids out of mosses, lichens, and beetle shells on the tree trunks, and will move them to underground shelters to protect them from bad weather. All this is so the ants can ‘milk’ the aphids for their honeydew.”
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Cockroaches can be learners. (Photo by E. Karits, Unsplash) |
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Female paper wasps fight each other. (Photo by Tom Sid, Unsplash) |
Paper wasps engage in politics and have their own Fight Club. “Paper wasps can recognize individual wasp faces, a cognitive skill that comes in handy given that a nest can have multiple queens who need to negotiate with one another. The dominant queen will lay the most eggs, leaving subordinate queens to decide whether to stay or leave and establish their own smaller nests, which will be more susceptible to attack or failure. In order to determine the dominant queen, paper wasps fight each other. Facial recognition means they know who they’ve fought and whether or not they were beaten, maintaining a more harmonious nest."
from The Rural Blog https://ift.tt/JuWpUIT For the love of insects: Here are the four smartest - Entrepreneur Generations
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