• MeatPilot@sh.itjust.works
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    7 hours ago

    Insects are complex and different in how they process information. Ants are smart for insects, but still not fully individuals in the same way we look at mammals or other animals.

    https://wildlifeinformer.com/do-ants-have-brains/

    The simple answer is thoughts are pheromones. Essentially one ant shares it’s individual experiences with the entire colony and the colony all works for the same goals. So yeah they kinda connect to the colony organic wifi by releasing the same chemicals that other animals do but the chemicals are shared.

    So one feels rewarded, the rest do and that leads to them working together. This is why if you piss one off, they all attack because that chemical is shared with the colony and all of them become aggressive.

    Also a vast majority of insects are born with all the basic functions and skills of an adult. They come out knowing exactly what to do and how. There really is no “learning”, the colony learns the individual shares that knowledge.

    So every new ant pops out fully functional and basically downloads the rest from the colony to know where found food/water sources are if they are collectors. If they are soldiers they instantly get in line to protect the hive and know the layout.

    • Redjard@reddthat.com
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      7 hours ago

      So every ant, clone or not, is probably set up to only function in a colony.

      And I assume the genetics determine the language, so that even related ant nests don’t merge but stay distinct?

      • MeatPilot@sh.itjust.works
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        7 hours ago

        I’m not as knowledgeable about ant genetics as the other fellow. But I do know ants recognize each other from the same colony through chemical signals.

        There are insects that can hijack that, I think rival ants can even trick the ants of another colony to kill their own queen. There are also rival queens that can kill another queen and the rest of colony thinks that’s their queen. Essentially stealing and entire colony of ants they did not birth.

        So they are heavy into identification through chemical means over anything else. Genetics has not a lot to do with identification.

        I’m more of a spider guy. But the insect and arachnid worlds are fascinating to me.

      • wyldrstallyns@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        6 hours ago

        The “language” you speak of is more often expressed via pheromones rather than sound xor gesture, where ants are concerned —similar to the majority of the insect kingdom, and beyond.

        Here’re some more ant facts!

        amidst silliness