Oops! Grab that trunk: high-diving ants swing back toward their tree. (Cephalotes atratus).Certain ants that live 30 or so meters up in tropical trees can save themselves in midair from ruinous ru·in·ous adj. 1. Causing or apt to cause ruin; destructive. 2. Falling to ruin; dilapidated or decayed. ru falls by making moves previously known only in cheesy cheesy (che´ze) caseous. action films. Much as a movie heroine tumbles off cliffs but routinely manages to grab something to stop her fall, the female worker ants of the species Cephalotes atratus guide their plunges so they typically veer into a tree trunk, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. Stephen P. Yanoviak of University of Texas Medical Branch "UTMB" redirects here. For other system schools, see University of Texas System. The University of Texas Medical Branch (UTMB) is a component of the University of Texas System located in Galveston, Texas, about 50 miles (80 km) southeast of downtown Houston. in Galveston. The falling ants grip the trunk and then climb back home. When Yanoviak and his colleagues dropped dozens of the wingless ants out of a tree at a spot about 3 m from the trunk, 85 percent of the falling ants managed to swerve into that trunk, the researchers report in the Feb. 10 Nature. If chance alone were to dictate the fall, Yanoviak says, only 8 percent would strike the trunk. "Steve's story is great natural history," comments tropical entomologist John Longino of Evergreen State College in Olympia, Wash. Ants, like many other small creatures of the forest canopy, generally survive the impact of a fall. A long fall is better than getting gobbled up by a predator, and previous research has described increased "ant rain," a shower of ants falling from a tree-top, after a bird lands. Yanoviak argues that although a canopy ant wouldn't die from the impact of plummeting to the forest floor, it would face perils from predators there and risk not finding its way home. The project began, Yanoviak recalls, when he was perched high in a tree in Peru, brushing away ants that had swarmed onto him. He realized that they weren't falling straight down. To videotape videotape Magnetic tape used to record visual images and sound, or the recording itself. There are two types of videotape recorders, the transverse (or quad) and the helical. dark ants plunging toward the forest floor, Yanoviak painted them with white nail polish. Tests of thousands of C. atratus ants, dropped from the canopy on windless days, found the majority grasping grasping a similar equine neurosis to windsucking; the horse grasps a fixed object with its teeth, but does not swallow air. the trunk. Some returned to the tree-top within 10 minutes. Since the ants fall rapidly, some don't manage to hold on the first time they bump into the trunk. Then, they reorient Re`o´ri`ent a. 1. Rising again. The life reorient out of dust. - Tennyson. Verb 1. and try again lower down, says Yanoviak. When he painted over the eyes of some of the ants, their trunk-catching rate dropped to what would be predicted by chance. After testing several dozen species, Yanoviak reports that C. atratus is among the champs. Some species just drop. He suggests that C. atratus' wide head and flattened flat·ten v. flat·tened, flat·ten·ing, flat·tens v.tr. 1. To make flat or flatter. 2. To knock down; lay low: The boxer was flattened with one punch. rear legs may contribute to the maneuver. "Why not have wings?" says Longino. "I doubt there is any ant species for which the advantage of [workers'] having wings would outweigh the disadvantages, such as problems maneuvering inside nests." |
|
||||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion