Genetic scientists create freakish monster ants with huge heads & jaws

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Precarious

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A supersoldier next to a normal ant: Scientists say they can create the supersoldiers at will by dabbing normal ant larvae with a special hormone - the larvae then develop into supersoldiers rather than normal soldier or worker ants

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Scientists created the monster ants in the laboratory by activating ancient ancestral genes

Nightmarish 'supersoldier' ants with huge heads and jaws have been created by activating ancient genes.

Scientists believe the monster ants may be a genetic throwback to an ancestor that lived millions of years ago.

Scientists say they can create the supersoldiers at will by dabbing normal ant larvae with a special hormone - the larvae then develop into supersoldiers rather than normal soldier or worker ants.

Supersoldier ants can occur naturally in the wild, but only rarely. In the deserts of America and Mexico, their job is to protect the colony from raids by invading army ants.

The supersoldiers use their enormous heads to block the nest entrance and attack any enemy ants that get too close.

Scientists showed that ordinary ants of the species Pheidole morrisi contain all the genetic 'tools' needed to turn them into supersoldiers - they just need a hormonal push.

The research is reported today in the journal Science.

Authors Dr Rajendhran Rajakumar, from McGill University, Canada, and colleagues wrote: 'We uncovered an ancestral development potential to produce a novel supersoldier subcaste that has been retained throughout a hyperdiverse ant genus that evolved 35 to 60 million years ago.'

The results suggest that holding on to ancestral development toolkits may play an important role in evolving new physical traits, say the researchers.


http://www.dailymail...antic-jaws.html

 
Those remind me of the Bigheaded ants that like to try and get my pets! :angry: They are the same genus.

 
The most interesting thing about this is it suggests DNA may still hold the genes relating to earlier forms and that they can be activated by external triggers.

 
every spring ants swarm my room for a few weeks, hoping to take advantage of a luna moth hatchout or a dead mantis, i love the nice spring weather and being outside in the spring air and opening my room windows and allowing all the spring air into my room and enjoying the recurrence of life that spring brings, but i'd be freaked out if some of those things invaded my room

small ants run around my windowsill (my luna eggs r kept near there, the smell likely attracts them) and i can control them by vaccuuming up or (if i'm hungry enough) eating them, or best yet set out honey on a plate so they all are attracted to it, then they get stuck and die, but not things with those huge heads, they'd win and take over and the whole house would need fumigation :eek:

unfortunately we have no spring break this year because of an october storm :(

still i can't wait till may though when my lunas come out and i get to enjoy native wildlife :)

very cool pics henry :)

sorry for the ramble on, i just want to say i have many fond memories of spring but i hate it when ants taint those memories :)

 
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Those ants don't need any help whatsoever! The ones that come and raid my stuff are "Super ants" (Pheidole megacephala). :ninja: They can deal with just about anything and don't even have a sting. I have watched them take lizards apart. They will bridge across water, climb up to the ceiling to drop onto any container they want, and walk over anything that I put in their way. The only thing that slows them down, other than pesticides, is curl enhancing mousse, and it only slows them down. :mad:

I have to add that they are awesome creatures and have my utmost respect. :unsure: (looks over shoulder)

 
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Those ants don't need any help whatsoever! The ones that come and raid my stuff are "Super ants" (Pheidole megacephala). :ninja: They can deal with just about anything and don't even have a sting. I have watched them take lizards apart. They will bridge across water, climb up to the ceiling to drop onto any container they want, and walk over anything that I put in their way. The only thing that slows them down, other than pesticides, is curl enhancing mousse, and it only slows them down. :mad:

I have to add that they are awesome creatures and have my utmost respect. :unsure: (looks over shoulder)
Cool! I'll take some!

 
Just to clear up my ant rant a little, "Super ants" is just what I call them. Their common name is Big headed ant. The ants are actually small but very formidable against small creatures when they have a craving for flesh.

 
AH! Dear god.. This is the stuff nightmares are made of. I had an ant farm as a kid.. A couple got out once, so like a genius, I picked one up to stick it back in. That was incredibly painful. I can't imagine a bite from Mr. Potatohead here.

 
AH! Dear god.. This is the stuff nightmares are made of. I had an ant farm as a kid.. A couple got out once, so like a genius, I picked one up to stick it back in. That was incredibly painful. I can't imagine a bite from Mr. Potatohead here.
The bites from the Big headed ant (Pheidole megacephala), are only the pinch from the mandibles.

If I step on a nest, they will crawl on me and bite, but there is no sting they seem to do everything with brute force. I am not sure if the Pheidole morrisi can sting or not.

However, I have had ant stings that I would trade for a bee sting anyday. lol

 
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Scary ants! :blink: Almost looks like the heads are so big they have trouble controlling them. Apparently not. :blink:

 
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The most interesting thing about this is it suggests DNA may still hold the genes relating to earlier forms and that they can be activated by external triggers.
There are a lot of other studies on that as well. Chickens still contain the genes for teeth, claws, tails, etc. These genes can be "turned on" to express the desired ancestral phenotype.

 

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