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Where birds reign, ants rain.


Ants that haul themselves up tree trunks in search of insects and other food sometimes take the easy way down: They jump. What's more, like any cliff-hanging action figure, they'll jump to get away from the bad guy--or bird.

In the pine forests Pine forest may refer to:
  1. A forest of pine trees; see temperate coniferous forest
  2. The town of Pine Forest, Texas
 of northern Sweden, ecologist Paul D. Haemig of Umea University set out to see just what effect a bird in a tree has on the northern wood ant (Formica aquilonia Formica aquilonia is a species of wood ant of the genus Formica which are widely distributed in Europe and Asia, occurring from Scandinavia in the north to Bulgaria and Italy in the south, and from the UK eastwards through France and Germany to Russia, while they are also ). He measured ant traffic moving up and down trees outfitted with liquid-filled traps to catch any falling "ant rain." Half of the trees were baited with suet suet /su·et/ (soo´et) the fat from the abdominal cavity of ruminants, especially the sheep, used in preparing cerates and ointments and as an emollient.

suet

hard, raw fat from a beef carcass sold for cooking.
 to attract birds.

Without any birds around, 0 to 12 percent of the ant traffic took the jump, Haemig reports in the July Animal Behaviour. When a woodpecker woodpecker, common name for members of the Picidae, a large family of climbing birds found in most parts of the world. Woodpeckers typically have sharp, chisellike bills for pecking holes in tree trunks, and long, barbed, extensible tongues with which they impale  or other bird appeared, 3 to 28 percent of the traffic came down as rain. The longer the birds hung around, the heavier the ant rain became.

Some of the raining ants may simply have been blown or jostled off the tree by the foraging bird, Haemig offers, but he and other researchers have observed ants "deliberately" leaping off trees or laboratory tables. The ants may be acting like aquatic insects Aquatic insects live some portion of their life cycle in the water. They feed in the same ways as other insects. Some diving insects, such as predatory diving beetles, can hunt for food underwater where land-living insects cannot compete.  that launch themselves into the current of a stream as a means of escape, he says. Still, some ants would rather fight than flee. In earlier work, Haemig found that worker ants can attack foraging birds.
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1997, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Swedish researcher Paul D Haemig observed that northern wood ants were more likely to jump from trees that contained predator birds
Author:Mlot, Christine
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Aug 30, 1997
Words:235
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