When Ants Domesticated Fungi

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  • čas přidán 9. 05. 2022
  • While we’ve been farming for around 10,000 to 12,000 years, the ancestors of ants have been doing it for around 60 million years. So when, and how, and why did ants start … farming?
    Thanks to Franz Anthony (franzanth.com) for the excellent ant reconstruction featured in this episode!
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    References: docs.google.com/document/d/1G...

Komentáře • 1,7K

  • @eons
    @eons  Před 2 lety +536

    Hi comment section! Ants are pretty cool, right? Make sure to check out this recent video from our friends over at Deep Look on honeypot ants: czcams.com/video/Rid_YW3P8CA/video.html

    • @davidduchesne8421
      @davidduchesne8421 Před 2 lety +10

      How many ants does it take to fill an appartment?
      Ten
      It takes tenants!

    • @camcasey9479
      @camcasey9479 Před 2 lety +2

      hey i hope you are ok you sound like you have been a bit sick x

    • @Mr.Autodelete
      @Mr.Autodelete Před 2 lety

      I am telling y’all if it took forty million years for ants to go from lower to higher agriculture humans had to have been doing lower agriculture of some sense for a long long time!!! Yes talk more about these topics y’all are the best thank you for another excellent upload!!!!

    • @flingage
      @flingage Před 2 lety

      ah yes, the ant-icipation was killing me

    • @DVOPSEC
      @DVOPSEC Před 2 lety +1

      This is the second video that I’ve seen where a life form has lost an ability and was dependent on food to maintain nutrition. First one was that one about how our ancestors lost the ability to make vitamin C. Maybe the next video in the future can cover why it’s easy for life forms to lose an ability but difficult to gain it back?

  • @robertalaverdov8147
    @robertalaverdov8147 Před 2 lety +5058

    Ants also developed animal herding. Their herds consist of aphids. They feed on plant sap and excrete a sweet and nutritious liquid called honeydew, which the ants drink. In return, the ants run a protection racket, defending the aphids from predators like ladybirds.

    • @teodorasavoiu4664
      @teodorasavoiu4664 Před 2 lety +51

      Yeeeees

    • @goodking9799
      @goodking9799 Před 2 lety +260

      And sometimes snap their wings off

    • @ItsEnderDiego
      @ItsEnderDiego Před 2 lety +318

      Same goes for scalebugs, ant have seen potecting their herd from preditors and even seen carring the bugs to new plants to keep them well fed and productive

    • @VocaFan4ever
      @VocaFan4ever Před 2 lety +175

      Ikr! As a gardener when I see ants I know an aphids infestation is about to break out

    • @biokosmos
      @biokosmos Před 2 lety +40

      exact, they do it on my plants...

  • @veggieboyultimate
    @veggieboyultimate Před 2 lety +2951

    All this time, I thought the leaf cutter ants were carrying the leaf bits to feed the queen, instead it was something much more complex and awesome.

    • @ferretappreciator
      @ferretappreciator Před 2 lety +88

      Idk why but I always thought they ate the leaves then would spit stuff out from the leaf to use to build

    • @darrenmorales3885
      @darrenmorales3885 Před 2 lety +38

      @@ferretappreciator I think those are weaver ants. But I’m probably wrong

    • @DJFracus
      @DJFracus Před 2 lety +184

      @@darrenmorales3885 Weaver ants do something funnier. They pick up larva and use the larva's silk to stick leaves together for their nests. It's like using a baby as a glue gun.

    • @jmmaribong4350
      @jmmaribong4350 Před 2 lety +18

      @@DJFracus kurzgesagt?

    • @robertalaverdov8147
      @robertalaverdov8147 Před 2 lety +57

      Ants also developed animal herding. Their herds consist of aphids. They feed on plant sap and excrete a sweet and nutritious liquid called honeydew, which the ants drink. In return, the ants run a protection racket, defending the aphids from predators like ladybirds.

  • @origaminosferatu3357
    @origaminosferatu3357 Před 2 lety +1834

    So, basically these ants' ancestors were the equivalent of vault-dwellers, building their homes underground and growing their own food to survive a global apocalypse? Super cool.

    • @cmelton6796
      @cmelton6796 Před 2 lety +221

      Farm... farm never changes

    • @UGNAvalon
      @UGNAvalon Před 2 lety +142

      And every time Queens leave their Vault Cities, they take with them their own Garden of Fungi Creation Kit! xD

    • @SHF40k
      @SHF40k Před 2 lety +59

      antout new vegas

    • @arandomcommenter412
      @arandomcommenter412 Před 2 lety +53

      FALLOUT: Farm simulator edition

    • @MetalS0ldier
      @MetalS0ldier Před 2 lety +49

      Another Colony needs your help, here i’ll mark it on your map

  • @dianagibbs3550
    @dianagibbs3550 Před 2 lety +335

    Can I just say how cool it is that in about 25 years, we went from 'hey we finally sequenced a full genome!' to 'we are using full genome sequences of multiple species to determine their evolutionary history'? I think it's super cool.

    • @BlurbFish
      @BlurbFish Před rokem +24

      25 years ago, the CD-ROM was a high-tech data storage device with a capacity of several MB. These days the same amount of data can be accessed by wireless transfers in a matter of minutes, and most children only see CDs in museums or parents' dust-collecting hoards.

    • @dianagibbs3550
      @dianagibbs3550 Před rokem +8

      @@BlurbFish And both are about the improved power of information processing, more than anything else.

    • @nickark4807
      @nickark4807 Před rokem +5

      @@BlurbFish yeah when i was a teenager i had a portable cd player 😅 it's not that long ago i swear

    • @fionagibson7529
      @fionagibson7529 Před rokem +13

      I remember as a kid reading an article in a magazine about the Human Genome Project that had concluded a few years earlier. Little 6-year-old me didn’t fully understand the complicated parts but I knew what a genome and DNA were, so I was really excited to hear that, you know, we could actually “read” the whole thing. Now it’s like “we found a pinky bone in a cave and pulled an entire genome out of it.” A lot of people younger than me probably don’t understand just how absolutely insane that is.

    • @QUBIQUBED
      @QUBIQUBED Před rokem +2

      @@BlurbFishCDs in museums?!😅😂 😭 Are you for real?

  • @jenerix5257
    @jenerix5257 Před 2 lety +1760

    Humans with scurvy: "Damn, I wish I wasn't so dependent on these crops!"
    Attine ants: "First time?"

  • @dmanagable
    @dmanagable Před 2 lety +3473

    The idea that leaf cutter ants can trace their development to the meteor that wiped out the dinosaurs just blew my mind. And then thinking about the idea that the K-PG meteor "inspired" ants to pick up farming as a lifestyle just blew my mind a second time. Thank you PBS Eons for blowing my mind on a regular basis!

    • @LuSquared_
      @LuSquared_ Před 2 lety +23

      Hell yeah, miming blows!

    • @dmanagable
      @dmanagable Před 2 lety +9

      @@LuSquared_ lol whoops thanks for pointing that out

    • @ShadowWizard123
      @ShadowWizard123 Před 2 lety +34

      Are you telling me that meteor was covered in ants? Whoa
      🐜 🐜 🐜

    • @DavidLaMorte
      @DavidLaMorte Před 2 lety +25

      Ants didn’t trace their lineage. That work was done by human scientists, who deserve your admiration and respect.

    • @CatLover-lk9gz
      @CatLover-lk9gz Před 2 lety +52

      @@DavidLaMorte Duh. His wording was a tad strange. But that isn't what he meant. He didn't mean that THEY actually even know the origin of themselves.

  • @edo4867
    @edo4867 Před 2 lety +761

    "Leaf-cutter ants source only the finest, freshest biomass"... how true that is. Atta ants can destroy many of your garden plants. In an oversight of mine, they destroyed 4 strawberry plants that I had in my house, and in a single night. Of all the plants that there were, they were inclined to carry only the leaves of the strawberry plant. The Attini are admirable beings, but I have read that if they reached other continents outside of America, the result would be devastating for the plants of those regions; and that is very true.

    • @olliepope5775
      @olliepope5775 Před 2 lety +146

      The fungi actually sends chemical signals to the ants to tell them which species of leaf it "wants" to consume! They switch species on a sort of rotation which explains why they only went for your strawbs!!

    • @edo4867
      @edo4867 Před 2 lety +75

      @@olliepope5775 So it seems. The fungi probably grow much better with the finest, freshest, most tender leaves and branches.

    • @milferdjones2573
      @milferdjones2573 Před 2 lety +10

      Yet the plants with these ants over all do well. I wonder if the ants take bites out of other herbivores who enter their leaf crop land.
      But when not if they move around the world the local environments will adjust but will not be the same after.

    • @aplaceinthestars3207
      @aplaceinthestars3207 Před 2 lety +31

      That's what I kept thinking about as I watched this. I've read a lot about how leaf-cutters wreak havoc on subsistence gardens in S. America. While they look so... sophisticated and intelligent, scurrying about and hoisting their cuttings like giant banners, I also enjoy consuming produce. *Gives ants the side-eye*

    • @tobiasrietveld3819
      @tobiasrietveld3819 Před 2 lety

      @@olliepope5775 Not exactly. As far as I know there is a only a negative feedback from the fungus, signalling back to the ants if a specific leaftype is detrimental to its health. This is then amazingly 'remembered' by the colony for months and was proven by scientists in an experiment that treated leaves with an undetectable fungicide.
      The positive selection screening of leavestypes is mostly done by the ants themselves based on the nutritional value of the xylem as this is an important energy source for the ants cutting them up (an Atta major cutting up a leaf spends as much energy as an bumblebee flying). Also if the leaf contains many trace minerals, higher moisture levels or very high carb levels it can also be selected.

  • @DeinosDinos
    @DeinosDinos Před 2 lety +268

    I went to Costa Rica with my University a couple of years ago and I was lucky enough to be able to see one of those trails of leafcutters! What I thought was really cute is that during rainfall, the ants abandon their harvest and immediately duck for cover, so if you go for a walk soon after a tropical downpour you can actually see a whole trail of these cut leaves just left behind by the ants. For some reason I found that adorable. Love them!

    • @keep
      @keep Před 2 lety +7

      Awesome

    • @ericgonzalez8382
      @ericgonzalez8382 Před 2 lety +44

      Costa Rican here. They do run for cover when it rains. What’s not so lovely is that they are adapting too well to urban life, like rats or pigeons, and they destroy crops and trees. They are one of the only species besides humans that indiscriminately destroy the habitat that sustains them. It works in the middle of the jungle because there’s sufficient vegetation, but not elsewhere. It’s really frightening to wake up one morning and see a fully grown orange tree completely gone.

    • @SyphistPrime
      @SyphistPrime Před 2 lety +15

      @@ericgonzalez8382 If I recall there's a species of Ape in their own stone age that's eating all the shellfish in their area to the point where they may doom their progress and lose their tool use when the shellfish run out.

    • @sethdrake7551
      @sethdrake7551 Před 2 lety +24

      water droplets can be really dangerous if youre something as small as an ant: sometimes if a water droplet hits a small insect, the insect can actually get trapped inside it by the surface tension of the water, so they can basically just get drowned by these murderous water prisons that fall from the sky sometimes

    • @AtlasAZjourney
      @AtlasAZjourney Před rokem +4

      They are cute untill they kill your plants! Costa rican here, they just destroyed my new lemon tree🤣🤣🤣

  • @MrsBrit1
    @MrsBrit1 Před 2 lety +838

    I love the fact that the fungus tells them when to change leaf species because the trees will begin giving off toxins because the ants are attacking the tree, so the ants bring the leaf bits back and eventually the fungi sends them a signal that says "EWW, STOP! THIS IS KILLING ME! BRING ME LEAVES FROM SOMETHING ELSE!" and they stop attacking the tree that's releasing toxins and bring the fungus something else.

    • @theonahmad9612
      @theonahmad9612 Před 2 lety +25

      this is incredible, where can i read more about it?

    • @theonahmad9612
      @theonahmad9612 Před 2 lety +47

      how do ants even understand fungi signaling?? mind blown

    • @Great_Olaf5
      @Great_Olaf5 Před 2 lety +191

      @@theonahmad9612 Probably in a similar way to how we can tell when our crops or livestock aren't healthy and we switch fertilizer or food.

    • @georgemurdock7670
      @georgemurdock7670 Před 2 lety +106

      Now it sounds like the fungi is faming the ants…

    • @Great_Olaf5
      @Great_Olaf5 Před 2 lety +175

      @@georgemurdock7670 Domestication is almost always a two way process. We've modified our behavior and even physiology to adapt to our crops and livestock in more ways than most people realize. Most humans can instinctively read dog body language, with little need to be taught, and dogs can usually read human body language and voice tone similarly well. Cross species communication like that is relatively rare aside from a handful of nearly universal traits, note that we typically need to be taught to read cat body language to avoid getting signals crossed, and wolves, despite their relatedness, cannot read human body language like dogs can, often even with training and exposure. Farming and herding are behavioral adaptations to aid our domesticates, and we have, as a species, developed several mutations to help digest starches more efficiently and milk for longer into our lives. Siberian reindeer herders would travel with their herds along their migration routes, which are thousands of miles long, when even the most migratory hunter gatherer populations typically operate within a discrete, if fluid, territorial range that can be crossed and surveyed in weeks if need be.

  • @jimcappa6815
    @jimcappa6815 Před 2 lety +999

    I was today years old when I found out that the leaf cutter ants weren’t eating the leaves. And by today years old, I mean almost 59. Great info!

    • @LuisSierra42
      @LuisSierra42 Před 2 lety +3

      I think i first became aware of them in one of the Planet Earth documentaries

    • @andreahughes1155
      @andreahughes1155 Před 2 lety +12

      @@neo-filthyfrank1347 how is learning new information sad?

    • @andreahughes1155
      @andreahughes1155 Před 2 lety +14

      @@neo-filthyfrank1347 What is a "basic" fact? As a matter of fact the narrator stated the same thing about not knowing they did not eat leaves. Sad, that you are going to put someone down for learning something new to them.

    • @andreahughes1155
      @andreahughes1155 Před 2 lety +10

      @@neo-filthyfrank1347 What if he focused on chemistry? Or botany? Or nothing at all? We should celebrate those willing to learn new things.
      I love how you never defined what a "basic" fact was. Not awnsering a question that was asked.
      👆 How to say your dishonest without saying your dishonest.

    • @andreahughes1155
      @andreahughes1155 Před 2 lety +11

      @@neo-filthyfrank1347 Also your push up analogy fails on all levels. You dont start with pull ups if you cannot do one. You work out the muscles associated with that exercise until you can do you one, than work from there.
      Someone who cant do a pull up today but can three months down the road through hard work should be celebrated, not put down. The same goes for knowledge.

  • @CascadePSA
    @CascadePSA Před 2 lety +129

    8:20 “[Leaf cutter ants] are considered the dominant herbivore of the neotropics.” That’s really impressive considering they aren’t really even herbivores and are more of fungiphores.

    • @JosePineda-cy6om
      @JosePineda-cy6om Před 2 lety +18

      We can consider them herbivores with an extra step. Or, if you consider the whole colony as the actual individual, they are indeed herbivores, with these fungi being part of its digestive system, much like most herbivores have bacteria in their guts that help them process cellulose and lignine

  • @TheAntimon13
    @TheAntimon13 Před 2 lety +183

    I was surprised to hear that the fungi cannot live without the ants. Never thought their symbiotic relationship goes that far.

    • @tobiasrietveld3819
      @tobiasrietveld3819 Před 2 lety +21

      That's also because there are bacteria that completely evolved to predate on Leafcutter fungus. And then the Atta developed another symbiosis with a different bacterium that gets to live in grooves on their 'chest', helping the ants fight off this pest (a lot of the battle is making sure the Ph values stay optimal).

    • @axelaguirre5014
      @axelaguirre5014 Před rokem +2

      Thats kinda like bananas and us

    • @QUBIQUBED
      @QUBIQUBED Před rokem +7

      @@axelaguirre5014technically, even if it would be absurd, you could survive an entire lifetime without eating a single banana

    • @starstorm1267
      @starstorm1267 Před rokem +3

      Kinda like the relationship between certain domesticated animals with us. Some of them are so dependent on us for survival that they can’t live on their own anymore.

  • @scmontgomery
    @scmontgomery Před 2 lety +575

    Farming has to be my favorite form of convergent evolution.

    • @EpicGamer-yq8lb
      @EpicGamer-yq8lb Před 2 lety +117

      Mine is everything being a crab

    • @gibbous_silver
      @gibbous_silver Před 2 lety +53

      @@EpicGamer-yq8lb if you wanted to know, there’s a word for it: carcinization

    • @limiv5272
      @limiv5272 Před 2 lety +27

      @@gibbous_silver That sounds a bit too much like 'carcinogen'

    • @jackyex
      @jackyex Před 2 lety +65

      @@limiv5272 that's because the word for cancer came from crab, as in the original meaning of the word cancer means crab, because some old Greek scientist thought that the tumors looked like a crab's clawn.

    • @WanderTheNomad
      @WanderTheNomad Před 2 lety +67

      @@jackyex Cancer is just some of our cells trying to evolve back into crabs 🦀

  • @kziila0244
    @kziila0244 Před 2 lety +60

    “It ain’t much, but it’s honest work.”

  • @AntsCanada
    @AntsCanada Před 2 lety +108

    Ant love forever! ❤️🐜

  • @beanbean4563
    @beanbean4563 Před rokem +6

    There's something so adorable about the queen ant taking some fungi with her to start her own garden 😭

  • @fernandovillanea6133
    @fernandovillanea6133 Před 2 lety +176

    The ploidy number of higher farming fungi are also higher than lower farming fungi, the same thing humans do on domesticated crops, higher ploidy creates an artificial barrier for crossing with wild relatives

    • @drts6955
      @drts6955 Před 2 lety +6

      Fascinating

    • @romanmeneghinister1584
      @romanmeneghinister1584 Před 2 lety +29

      Well, that and in plants, higher ploidy typically results in larger tissues such as seeds or fruits

    • @Dragrath1
      @Dragrath1 Před 2 lety

      @@romanmeneghinister1584 ploidy tends to in general help drive the formation of novel structures which much rarer in animals the genetic fossil record shows polyploidy is associated with a number of key evolutionary radiations in particular based on molecular development processes and gene activation and molecular clock dating, bilaterians, gnathostomes, tetrapods, and amniotes all seem to show evidence linking the emergence of these clades to polypoidal hybridization events during times of extreme ecological stress.
      Namely the molecular clock dating and where applicable fossil evidence roughly lines up with the Cryogenian glaciations, Ordovician mass extinction, end Devonian mass extinctions, & Carboniferous rainforest collapse respectively.

  • @GeorgeTheDinoGuy
    @GeorgeTheDinoGuy Před 2 lety +367

    As a child I always used to love watching ants and have an anxiety of accidentally squishing them. I find it fascinating that those little guys were farming and living extremely complex lives in massive communities. Their world will never cease to amaze me.

    • @GeorgeTheDinoGuy
      @GeorgeTheDinoGuy Před 2 lety +3

      @The Philosoraptor thank you I appreciate that

    • @sethdrake7551
      @sethdrake7551 Před 2 lety +6

      what really amazes me is that they figured it all out while still being a distributed intelligence. Each ant only has something like 250,000 brain cells--few enough that a smartphone could probably simulate its entire brain in real time

    • @OrkKhanobi
      @OrkKhanobi Před 2 lety +1

      Same, I spent most of my time outside watching ants tried to protect them from other kids.

    • @GeorgeTheDinoGuy
      @GeorgeTheDinoGuy Před 2 lety +1

      @@OrkKhanobi you are a hero

    • @GeorgeTheDinoGuy
      @GeorgeTheDinoGuy Před 2 lety

      @@sethdrake7551 wow

  • @heck_n_degenerate940
    @heck_n_degenerate940 Před 2 lety +203

    Assuming the period of fungal domination also caused the other peculiar relationship of fungus to ants (the species of mind controlling fungus); one could say it’s possible to imagine that from the perspective of ants an impact from a space meteor literally gave them the zombie apocalypse.

    • @strakhovandrri
      @strakhovandrri Před 2 lety +15

      There was a video about these fungi on this channel, check it out. It never says about connection between these two events.

    • @leviathen151
      @leviathen151 Před rokem +4

      OR....the zombie fungi was the result of a "mad scientist" ant who cross bred the wrong fungal spores

  • @danc6167
    @danc6167 Před 2 lety +18

    As a kid growing up in Toronto, I always loved going to the Ontario Science Centre and watching the leaf cutter ants in the indoor rainforest. I always found it fascinating to see their efficient little train of plants being carried along.

  • @germen2631
    @germen2631 Před 2 lety +459

    This is so cool. Evolution of a certain species is always a pleasure to see, but one that develops medicine for another species is amazing

    • @arealhuman826
      @arealhuman826 Před 2 lety

      hi ET friend

    • @krankarvolund7771
      @krankarvolund7771 Před 2 lety +3

      It's not a species, but a family ^^

    • @nickark4807
      @nickark4807 Před rokem

      It's even if of scary haha maybe eventually they will be so smart that they can overthrow us

  • @swadswadlo3717
    @swadswadlo3717 Před 2 lety +241

    I saw these little creatures in the past life while in Panama. No single file moving for that colony, I think they spread about 18 inches across the trail and they had what looked to be a security detail to protect the column. It was amazing!

    • @katelynnehansen8115
      @katelynnehansen8115 Před 2 lety +43

      They do! They have soldier ants that keep watch and help protect the workers! Ants are pretty incredible!

    • @613-shadow9
      @613-shadow9 Před 2 lety +9

      the past life?

    • @Elitecommando501
      @Elitecommando501 Před 2 lety +4

      @@613-shadow9 yeah. His past reincarnation

    • @613-shadow9
      @613-shadow9 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Elitecommando501 recycled souls

    • @johnjoe69
      @johnjoe69 Před 2 lety +19

      @@613-shadow9 he means life in a previous country. Foreigners have an odd aay of using English that isn't used like we use it. Past life he means previous place of living, previous home and life style.

  • @sydposting
    @sydposting Před 2 lety +19

    Ahh, I've always been so interested in these little guys! Fun fact: Princess Atta in A Bug's Life is named after a genus of fungus-farming ants! 🤗

    • @squallleonheart8494
      @squallleonheart8494 Před rokem +2

      One of my fav movie of all time.. for me it's 7 samurai part 3.. or 3rd remake hehe.. and I love ants..

  • @derekbrou
    @derekbrou Před 2 lety +19

    I am completely stunned, I knew about some ants caring for aphids like livestock but somehow this is even more insane to me

    • @gustavoboscardin9351
      @gustavoboscardin9351 Před 2 lety +4

      I have seem ants caretaking trees in order to feed from their secretions. They literally ate the parasites and guarded the tree

    • @canchero724
      @canchero724 Před 2 lety +6

      And it's something that has worked for so long. 60 million years is a ridiculous amount of time. Makes us look like amateurs.

    • @derekbrou
      @derekbrou Před 2 lety +1

      @@canchero724 can you imagine the number of generations of ant colonies that encompasses?? Or the number of individual ants!? Why does this hurt my mind so much haha

    • @terraristit3752
      @terraristit3752 Před 2 lety +4

      @@derekbrou Well, since ant workers (in general) live from three years to one month depending on the species, and since an ant queen lives between 20 and 30 years, 60 000 000 years encompasses around 20 000 000 to 720 000 000 generations of individual ants, depending on the species, or between 3 000 000 and 2 000 000 ant colonies, depending on how long each queen lived. And yes, I used a calculator, lol. Hopefully I calculated this right, I *suck* at math, even when using calculators XD

    • @canchero724
      @canchero724 Před 2 lety +2

      @@terraristit3752 Stop. The numbers are getting too big and I'm getting dizzy lmfao

  • @gucci1131
    @gucci1131 Před 2 lety +79

    Ant's are so bloody cool, they got their own civilization just minding their own business

    • @solsystem1342
      @solsystem1342 Před 2 lety +9

      If you haven't heard of super colonies you should try looking them up. Although I think some of them are splintering and/or being beaten back by other invasive species (of ant).

    • @user-qw9yf6zs9t
      @user-qw9yf6zs9t Před 2 lety

      Humans are so bloody cool, they got their own civilization just minding their own business

    • @sethdrake7551
      @sethdrake7551 Před 2 lety +3

      ants are not a species id describe as "minding their own business"

    • @gucci1131
      @gucci1131 Před 2 lety +9

      @@sethdrake7551 I guess your right, they ain't minding their business when they eat thru your house 🤣

    • @Chaos2Frozen
      @Chaos2Frozen Před 2 lety +2

      @@gucci1131 Well it's not just that- Ants are also a pretty warmongering species ^^;

  • @Scarlet_Soul
    @Scarlet_Soul Před 2 lety +22

    There was an old farmer who lived on a rock, He sat in the meadow just shaking his... mandibles

    • @Drew-hl3mc
      @Drew-hl3mc Před rokem

      Yer name? and comment? hahaha.

  • @uzesamaX
    @uzesamaX Před 2 lety +5

    I live in Uruguay, and it's very difficult to see ants that don't carry their cut leafs. I mean, a person who loves their plants trembles when they see them around, as it won't be long until your favourite and most cared plants have their precious leafs cut, so it's very true they pick the best of the best. Quino even made jokes on Mafalda's dad's plants and his struggle against ants. As for me, I enjoy watching them carrying those leaf bits even bigger than them, and acting as a sail of sorts when the day is windy

  • @phatrickmoore
    @phatrickmoore Před 2 lety +13

    It really is just crazy, this channel does such amazing work. I have been watching y'all's videos for a long time now, it is very special to me. This is important work and we thank you!

  • @neochris2
    @neochris2 Před 2 lety +139

    How ironic. They went from leaves to fungus because of a lack of leaves. Evolved a dependency for the fungus, then the fungus evolved a dependency for leaves. Now the ants are dependant on leaves again just like at the beginning but its not for them, they have cursed themselves for extra steps.

    • @stillsmashin1529
      @stillsmashin1529 Před 2 lety +8

      There are cows out there that eat better than most of the human population.

    • @spagootest2185
      @spagootest2185 Před 2 lety +31

      @@stillsmashin1529 it's not that hard when your diet consists of grass

    • @pinklasagna8328
      @pinklasagna8328 Před rokem +2

      Ants dont rely on leaves though

    • @Jedislayer19
      @Jedislayer19 Před rokem +5

      @@spagootest2185 funny thing about that is 50% of daily caloric intake for humans consist of cereal grains and cereal grain products (which come from cereal grasses).

    • @hasanmuttaqin464
      @hasanmuttaqin464 Před rokem +1

      Just as we are

  • @Jobobn1998
    @Jobobn1998 Před 2 lety +325

    I love episodes about eusocial insects! Easily one of the most-effective evolutions on this planet!

    • @Mr.Autodelete
      @Mr.Autodelete Před 2 lety +4

      Do you think some species were more intelligent independent thinkers pre eusocial evolution

    • @Jobobn1998
      @Jobobn1998 Před 2 lety +9

      @@Mr.Autodelete Oh, absolutely. We know that human brains shrank by several percentage points when we became more social and interdependent--which makes perfect sense, since we moved towards having more specialized roles rather than every human having to be a "jack-of-all-trades" just to survive.

    • @neochris2
      @neochris2 Před 2 lety +14

      @@Mr.Autodelete More independent thinkers yes, but more intelligent... not necessarily.

    • @BossOfAllTrades
      @BossOfAllTrades Před 2 lety +3

      @@neochris2 independent thoughts and decisions are not needed as much, this is a big reason we as humans develop brains for strategic advantages within hunting.

    • @lyreparadox
      @lyreparadox Před 2 lety +5

      Nah, the devs should definitely patch that exploit.

  • @uptown3636
    @uptown3636 Před 2 lety +2

    I think this might be the best PBS Eons video yet. Congratulations to the *whole* team for doing superb work!

  • @WranglerJess97
    @WranglerJess97 Před 2 lety +11

    Ants never cease to fascinate me. Amazing little creatures. As humans, we should be very thankful that ants aren't any bigger. Could you imagine if they were the size of cats or dogs?

  • @sebastianfiel1715
    @sebastianfiel1715 Před 2 lety +39

    I have a history with these little pests. They have the body covered in spikes, their exoskeleton is ridiculously strong, and each one of them have a size of 1cm. You can step on them and they'll survive like nothing happened. They are leafcutters with huge heads but they also go inside my kitchen to take whatever they can find. What a pain.

    • @milferdjones2573
      @milferdjones2573 Před 2 lety +4

      I spend a short time at a hospital level pest control company. They don't lay poison or traps they go in and seal every possible way the pests get into a structure. There reps spend tons of time crawling into things to find all the seal points. Also including things like finding out pests hiding in carts left in garage and carried inside and roaches breeding inside of phones. With roaches they had to take everything apart and find their nests and kill them the only way the sprayed when actually killing things.

    • @jacobm2625
      @jacobm2625 Před 2 lety +4

      @@milferdjones2573 roaches inside of phones? Like old landline stuff, or switchboards, or what? I’m morbidly fascinated.

  • @daniell1483
    @daniell1483 Před 2 lety +122

    Mind-blowing! It is amazing that humans weren't the first to develop agriculture. I wonder if we can learn anything from these "higher agriculture" ant colonies. I can't help but wonder if they have a calorie-rich fungus that we humans could adopt or something.

    • @EluviumMC
      @EluviumMC Před 2 lety +32

      I mean, yeast is a fungus used to make bread, so assuming you're not gluten intolerant, you're kind of like these ants.

    • @georgemurdock7670
      @georgemurdock7670 Před 2 lety +14

      @@EluviumMC i wanted to write "eew i dont wanna eat some fungus" but yeast is and so are mushrooms… disgusting

    • @randompheidoleminor3011
      @randompheidoleminor3011 Před 2 lety +35

      Fungus farming termites are thought to have evolved fungiculture around the same time as ants and their fungus (termitomyces) produces large mushrooms that are considered incredibly tasty - and rare, as even we humans haven't figured out how to farm them yet! These fellas are also the ones famous for building 'skyscrapers' with complex ventilation systems in Africa, and play an important role in fertilising the soil there.

    • @daniell1483
      @daniell1483 Před 2 lety +8

      @@randompheidoleminor3011 That is exactly the sort of thing I hoped to learn when I made my original post! I've never given much thought to termites before, but if they have fungal agriculture then I count them in the same category. It would be really interesting if someday an ant or termite-designed plant/fungus became useful to humans.

    • @adamhercik581
      @adamhercik581 Před 2 lety +9

      They literally genetically engineered a high-nutritional crop, like wtf.

  • @newnamepending7084
    @newnamepending7084 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you PBS, for continuing to teach meaningful subjects and blow my mind.

  • @curtiswfranks
    @curtiswfranks Před 2 lety +5

    This was absolutely mindblowing.
    Can you do an episode on aphid farming by ants?

  • @gavinrushing12
    @gavinrushing12 Před 2 lety +40

    Oh my goodness, thank you SO MUCH for making a video on the GREATEST SPECIES OF ALL TIME!

    • @douglasharley2440
      @douglasharley2440 Před 2 lety +1

      which one?...as discussed in this video, there are many different species in the ant tribe _attini._

    • @gavinrushing12
      @gavinrushing12 Před 2 lety +3

      @@douglasharley2440 True. Sorry for the confusion. I really shouldn't have said "species," it was just the first word that came to mind.

    • @drts6955
      @drts6955 Před 2 lety +1

      Rushing to conclusions as usual?

    • @gavinrushing12
      @gavinrushing12 Před 2 lety +3

      @@drts6955 Oh dear. I've seen FAR too many of those jokes throughout my life. This is the first one in a while, though.

  • @hayvenforpeace
    @hayvenforpeace Před 2 lety +35

    It’s amazing that *insects* can be so intelligent to figure out such a complex survival strategy.

    • @MagSec40
      @MagSec40 Před 2 lety +13

      The beauty of evolution is how it is able to create competence without comprehension. It's intuitive for us to assign intelligence to certain behaviors, but it's misleading. The truth is more interesting and complex.

    • @hayvenforpeace
      @hayvenforpeace Před 2 lety +5

      @@MagSec40 This is true, and my OP was mistaken. Instinct and programming can be just as powerful as intelligence.

    • @rhysarthur3378
      @rhysarthur3378 Před rokem

      Is it really as complex as we think?

  • @handsofrhythm3415
    @handsofrhythm3415 Před 2 lety +8

    Thank you, I really appreciate how you graphically present the information you are conveying. I feel that your visuals are becoming more effective. That helps us common folk deal with geological time a bit easier.
    Please don't stop Eons team, I dream of the day you make me smart enough (because my countries education system didn't) to be able to financially support you. Until then, I am only able to convey my thanks.
    Thank you very much for all your hard work, don't stop making history funny and interesting.

  • @eddiepedrosa3805
    @eddiepedrosa3805 Před rokem +2

    It would have been nice if he explained how the fungi consume the pieces of leaf

  • @germen2631
    @germen2631 Před 2 lety +20

    "A parade of leaf-cutter ants, tirelessly carrying food to their nest", In that especific moment in the video, you can see a group of ants do nothing while the rest work.
    Maybe ants and humans aren't so different

    • @deithlan
      @deithlan Před 2 lety +12

      I don’t have the exact numbers with me but, in fact, a pretty high percentage of ants in a nest are, in any given moment, doing absolutely nothing! They completely rely on the work of others, and hey, it perfectly works for them!

    • @RobertSanz1
      @RobertSanz1 Před 2 lety +2

      "watch tower ants"

  • @LowerTheBoom
    @LowerTheBoom Před 2 lety +11

    This reminds me a little bit of the episode where they talked about how the asteroid that killed the dinosaurs also created the conditions under which the Amazon rainforest would inevitably emerge.

  • @gustavopachecoortizpinchet2412

    I am so happy that I found this amazing video. A couple of weeks ago I was walking with a friend through the center of Cuernavaca (State of Morelos, Mexico) and we saw this flow of ants (about 20 cm wide and several meters long) in the middle of the street, each one carrying a cut sheet. It was already amazing to witness this phenomenon, but now knowing that it could have been ants of an agricultural colony leaves me speechless. This video got me more hooked on bioinformatics. Greetings from Mexico!

  • @kn9ne749
    @kn9ne749 Před 2 lety +4

    Amazing! Hope you can do a video on ants farming aphids and other insects, pillbugs, mealy bugs, etc.!

  • @bobcabbit6343
    @bobcabbit6343 Před 2 lety +50

    I love ants! They figured out farming and ranching long before humans were on the scene. I used to keep whole colonys when I was in my 20s. I loved nothing more then watching them work.

    • @Kabup2
      @Kabup2 Před 2 lety +1

      Humans start farming about 1 or 2 million of years after evolving.

    • @Rudol_Zeppili
      @Rudol_Zeppili Před 2 lety +5

      @@Kabup2 the difference between ant groups is more than in primates, it’s just that humans and apes are more intelligent than ants, so we think we have larger differences. But there are probably a lot of intelligence differences among ants.

    • @TragoudistrosMPH
      @TragoudistrosMPH Před 2 lety

      Do you wonder if ants watched you and wish you pitched in with the work? ;P

    • @solsystem1342
      @solsystem1342 Před 2 lety +1

      @@TragoudistrosMPH you can easily tell if insects notice you their behavior changes a lot. Usually they panic but some of them freeze as well. Not as familiar with eusocial insects but I'd assume their behavior would change as well.

    • @Kabup2
      @Kabup2 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Rudol_Zeppili Humans start to farming through observation and experimentation, but ant's farming was natural selection. Not intelligent at all, although the results are quite similar.

  • @HeatherSaltas
    @HeatherSaltas Před 2 lety +93

    Will you do the evolution of bees? I’m a beekeeper and this would be so interesting!

    • @lexprontera8325
      @lexprontera8325 Před 2 lety +5

      Supporting this with a like and a comment.

    • @pepppery
      @pepppery Před 2 lety +11

      Fun fact bee's use to prey on other insects for sustenance, then after millions of years of accidentally bringing back pollen to the hive, Bee's said, you know what, this stuff is wayyy better, and easier to collect. So voila!

  • @heatherpalmucci5999
    @heatherpalmucci5999 Před 2 lety

    The most Contant rich per square second of documentary footage. Absolutely loved it and I hope to see more.

  • @Mithrandir39
    @Mithrandir39 Před 2 lety +1

    About 7 years ago I went to Costa Rica for a holiday. A holiday for me mean to hunt for animals to take pictures of so we did lots of searching and came across leaf cutter ants in one spot. I was so fascinated by them that i sat and watched them for at least a half an hour. It was amazing to watch them work.

  • @toodlesX14
    @toodlesX14 Před 2 lety +12

    I guess I always assumed leaf-cutter ants ate the leaves, I never really thought about it. This video is a mind blowing revelation for me!

  • @magichands135
    @magichands135 Před 2 lety +165

    From what Ive heard, an ant colony has about the same neuron mass as a human brain and all ants together make up roughly the same amount of biomass as all humans. There must be some meaning in there somewhere.

    • @solsystem1342
      @solsystem1342 Před 2 lety +64

      Not in the same way you think. Ant and other distributed intelligences are much better at some tasks ie: comparing many options, efficient exploration and, multitasking. However they are much worse at other tasks like visual processing, creative problem solving, speech recognition, etc.

    • @groverrogers6916
      @groverrogers6916 Před 2 lety +25

      @@solsystem1342 its almost like the difference between ants and humans is the same as collectivism and individualism hmmmm

    • @xenasaur520
      @xenasaur520 Před 2 lety +22

      not even close. humans are about 2.5% of animal biomass, whereas ants are about 15-20%

    • @tjarkschweizer
      @tjarkschweizer Před 2 lety +7

      "There must be some meaning in there somewhere"
      Why? On what do you base this assumption?

    • @krankarvolund7771
      @krankarvolund7771 Před 2 lety +16

      "From what Ive heard, an ant colony has about the same neuron mass as a human brain"
      Yeah, no XD
      An ant colony can vary, from species to species to a few hundreds individuals to several thousands with multiple queens, or even multiple nests. There's no way that all of these different types of colonies will all be equal to the same neuron mass as a human brain ^^

  • @joshualoiacono5488
    @joshualoiacono5488 Před 10 měsíci

    Great video! I looked up “Ant fungi gardens” because I’d never heard of them until it was mentioned in a textbook. Thanks for the history and explanation!

  • @imperium5195
    @imperium5195 Před 2 lety +2

    I love this channel, when I was little I was passionate about all that talk to you on channel, like for example dinosaurs, mesozoic, paleozoic the Cenozoic... also the large mammals of the Paleocene, the Pleistocene, the Miocene... This channel is just literally a gold mine 🤩🤑😌

  • @user-mx2qx4rl9o
    @user-mx2qx4rl9o Před 2 lety +5

    Great video, loved how much info was packed in here

  • @rs8751
    @rs8751 Před 2 lety +28

    I wonder if there's a similarly lengthy evolutionary and genomic history for those shepherd ants that farm aphids and other insects?

    • @lexprontera8325
      @lexprontera8325 Před 2 lety

      Me too! In fact I could think of SEVERAL ideas for episodes about coevolution.

  • @HobbesTWC
    @HobbesTWC Před 2 lety

    "which is also how I go through life" made me chuckle. very informative and fun video.

  • @guyh.4553
    @guyh.4553 Před 2 lety +15

    I think I knew this but it is great to learn the how's and why's of their evolution. As usual, great video Eons!

  • @mmcguire6286
    @mmcguire6286 Před 2 lety +37

    I think that humans should domesticate leaf cutter ants so that we can then study the first(?) double-domesticated species: the fungus domesticated by our domesticated ants. This would accomplish nothing but be lots of fun.

    • @Najolve
      @Najolve Před 2 lety +8

      It'd be even better if we could train them to hunt fire ants that like to colonize my yard.

    • @gustavsantos6225
      @gustavsantos6225 Před 2 lety +4

      @@Najolve you would definetly not want that, these leaf cutter ants are ruining my lemon tree, i actually think it is going to die

    • @Jamelith
      @Jamelith Před 11 měsíci

      Lower is more bio diverse and more sustainable. It will only be because we are omnivores that we would have a hope of surviving an age that destroyed our non bio diverse crops. Maybe with a bit of AI help thrown in.

  • @grillmeisterkush6396
    @grillmeisterkush6396 Před 2 lety +1

    this is the most incredible thing i have learned from this channel!!

  • @marcociolli785
    @marcociolli785 Před 2 lety +1

    Marvellous, PBS Eons you are AWESOME!

  • @gabrielb5742
    @gabrielb5742 Před 2 lety +3

    Yeah, these little bastards destroyed my cinnamon tree, there ain't a single leave left, never underestimate them, their agriculture is, proportionally to size, as destructive as our own.
    And they don't go down easy either, I've been trying to exterminate them for half a year, just to watch them bounce back stronger and destroying my garden again.
    Discovering that they survived nuclear winters in the K-PG meteor, just made me even more hopeless.
    Damn you PBS Eons!

  • @vulpesruepelli3634
    @vulpesruepelli3634 Před 2 lety +3

    please do more videos on fungi they are so interesting and so complex I'm sure there are thousands of videos you could make in them

  • @Russo-cy5pg
    @Russo-cy5pg Před 2 lety +1

    this is so cool! my textbook for biology 2 talked about their symbiosis but I did not know about how the impact effected their evolution or about the types of ant agriculture.

  • @jso6790
    @jso6790 Před 2 lety +1

    Every episode just blows my mind. The natural world truly is awe-inspiring.

  • @marsbalaba9373
    @marsbalaba9373 Před 2 lety +4

    Designed to be a collaborative insects, it's like a collective information being brought together whenever they perform, a network of connection, ants are awesome indeed.

  • @jamesdominguez7685
    @jamesdominguez7685 Před 2 lety +4

    Absolutely fascinating! I always love your videos, but this one blew my mind multiple times. I kept pausing it and taking off my headphones to tell my wife about the newest thing I'd learned.

  • @Alice_Walker
    @Alice_Walker Před 4 měsíci

    This is one of my favourite Eons videos! So so cool! 🍄🐜🐜🐜🐜

  • @thierryploum5923
    @thierryploum5923 Před rokem

    This one, too, is a great ant documentary, and looks into fungus, which we know so little of, but that knowledge is improving, little by little. Thanks for making it sound as interesting as it is. More; more; more! Thanks, ... bud! ;-)

  • @staytuned2L337
    @staytuned2L337 Před 2 lety +3

    I absolutely adore the way you present. ^^ favorite host.

  • @Eckendenker
    @Eckendenker Před 2 lety +8

    What's even cooler:
    This happened twice. Termites aren't related to ants/bees at all (they're roaches) and developed beat for beat the exact same model. Colony state. Individual specialization. Breeding Queens. Fully domesticated fungus. Harvesting only a special type of plant (wood).

  • @zetahoven4556
    @zetahoven4556 Před 2 lety +1

    Very amusing to imagine a lone ant scurrying away from the destructive force of the asteroid amd tucked tightly in its tiny mandible is the one thing it managed to grab before galloping away to safety: a small piece of fungus.

  • @nickcosimano5028
    @nickcosimano5028 Před 2 lety +1

    I used to have leaf cutters under house. They brought leaves by our front door. Our family loved them and they never left until we moved. I used to help them sometimes.
    Also, don’t some make vents to empty toxic air from the fungus and bring in fresh air.

  • @grokeffer6226
    @grokeffer6226 Před 2 lety +5

    Fascinating. When I watched the movie, Don't Look Up, I immediately thought about ants and how they might have survived and thrived after such an event. There would certainly be lots of stuff laying around that an ant could eat.

  • @stephanieyee9784
    @stephanieyee9784 Před 2 lety +3

    This is incredible and gives me a greater appreciation for ants. They really are quite amazing creatures and very intelligent.

  • @silnalapa
    @silnalapa Před 2 lety +2

    Imagine how Darwin would be thrilled for every new episode of PBS Eons

  • @Whuditlooklike
    @Whuditlooklike Před 2 lety +1

    This is the most fascinating thing I have ever discovered from this channel. I had no idea ants were practicing agriculture.

  • @dontask8979
    @dontask8979 Před 2 lety +10

    Question...
    I heard ants only take what they can use.
    Here's the weird part...
    Years ago and I was outside and was using a light weight desk type stapler. Next thing I hear was the exgf son was like "LOOK!"
    There were ants carrying the dropped staples away. Not like 1 or two, there was like 6 walking off at the same time. We ran like 50 more through the stapler and left them in a pile.
    Long story short...they carried off everyone of them.
    Why?
    Maybe the iron?
    Iv been puzzled by this for over 20 years.
    Love to hear some thoughts

    • @corruptedminds5679
      @corruptedminds5679 Před 2 lety +14

      Some species of ants use small twigs and such in building thier nests. Maybe it's something to do with that? Honestly no idea though.

    • @robertfaler1947
      @robertfaler1947 Před 2 lety +8

      They read the Dilbert book: "Build a better life for yourself by stealing office supplies"

    • @TragoudistrosMPH
      @TragoudistrosMPH Před 2 lety

      I can't find anything online...
      An ant species has metal reinforced mandibles ... but not every species does...

    • @lenarianmelon4634
      @lenarianmelon4634 Před rokem

      As an ant keeper the most likely explanation is building material, not for the nest but likely for drying a road. Ants use dry and hard materials such as sand when a path gets wet.

  • @jikty891
    @jikty891 Před 2 lety

    Amazing short documentary. Thank you!

  • @hungrybois5954
    @hungrybois5954 Před 2 lety

    A new PBS Eons video always makes my day.

  • @Mr.Autodelete
    @Mr.Autodelete Před 2 lety +7

    Please more videos on agriculture and evolution!!!!

  • @Beryllahawk
    @Beryllahawk Před 2 lety +17

    Ah, I do love listening to Blake enjoying a script. The jokes and especially his giggles really made my morning hahaha!
    Absolutely fascinating video. I had know that leafcutter ants used them as farm fodder, but I did NOT know there was a whole huge group of ants that did similar farming! Nor did I realize how far the leafcutters' range spreads - I thought they were a single species in the Amazon rainforests. (Granted: the documentaries I've seen likely focused on the Amazon species but still.) And a very plausible theory indeed for why the ants might have needed to farm in this way, too. Do we have any notion about the "herding" ant species? I recall being taught that "all" ants (by which I suppose the teacher meant Texas red ants, which were hands down the most common ones in our area and the specific ones we had to look at in the classroom) keep herds of aphids or similar such smaller insects. The particulars surely must vary between regions and species, of course - this information was given me back in the 1980s and was massively simplified for elementary school kids.
    But it seems like - IF there were aphid herders around the Big Boom as it were - it would make a kind of sense to move from "domesticated" aphids to finding something else to domesticate; aphids rely on plants of course, so they too must surely have been struggling in that dark and humid apocalypse, right?
    Thank you Eons for another really, REALLY great video! I look forward to the next one - might even say with great ANTicipation!!

    • @Meganopteryx
      @Meganopteryx Před 2 lety +1

      I've seen opportunistic herding behaviors in fire ants and dark rover ants at the very least.

  • @JeremyAlpha
    @JeremyAlpha Před 2 lety +1

    Fascinating, thank you for such a great video :)

  • @erikthebold
    @erikthebold Před rokem

    More great delivery from homeboy.
    Keep it going. Stay natural and funny

  • @douglasgorde5823
    @douglasgorde5823 Před 2 lety +88

    Why is the idea of being domesticated by an ant so fascinating but also so existentially dreadful?

    • @MrsBrit1
      @MrsBrit1 Před 2 lety +40

      What's even neater is that the fungus has also domesticated the ant because it literally tells them what food to bring, and they do it. This is at least true for leaf cutter ants. The trees release toxins to make the ants stop attacking it and that toxin will kill the fungus, so when that toxin reaches the fungus, the fungus sends the ants a signal to stop bringing it and bring something else, and they do! They have to, or their fungus will die.

    • @Rudol_Zeppili
      @Rudol_Zeppili Před 2 lety +5

      @@MrsBrit1 citation (not because I doubt it, but because I really like that idea)

    • @TragoudistrosMPH
      @TragoudistrosMPH Před 2 lety +16

      Humans don't naturally go on picnics...ants domesticated humans to provide food AT picnics!

    • @solsystem1342
      @solsystem1342 Před 2 lety +6

      @@TragoudistrosMPH If you think picnics are the only time you bring ants food you're sorely mistaken.
      Need I remind you that ants outmass humans that is to say if you put all ants and all humans on a balance scale the ants would weigh more. Like a lot more.

    • @SacredDaturana
      @SacredDaturana Před 2 lety +2

      Reminds me of The Future Is Wild where one of the hypothesized future scenarios were the last mammals being farmed by spiders. (Stephen Baxter's Evolution also had a similar concept? I don't recall 100%.)

  • @LowerTheBoom
    @LowerTheBoom Před 2 lety +11

    Edward O. Wilson might have liked this episode. Due to the fact that he was a real big student of ants.

  • @cassiopeiasfire6457
    @cassiopeiasfire6457 Před rokem +1

    Leafcutter ants are my favorite! I didn't know we'd worked out their history tho, this was fascinating!

  • @Antoniomlx
    @Antoniomlx Před 2 lety

    Living in Brazil, one can often hear, in gardens, the quite loud sound of leaf cutter ants, by the thousands, cutting and dragging leaves around

  • @cndibentertainment2761
    @cndibentertainment2761 Před 2 lety +10

    I'm a veteran. I fought a bloody war with an army of ants trying to move to my apartment from my lower neighbors dirty apt. All I did was watch them close, found their entry point, killed a few only. Left the bodies at their entry point and they haven't returned in years

  • @nyarparablepsis872
    @nyarparablepsis872 Před 2 lety +2

    Wow. Just.... wow.
    Thank you for sharing such amazing things with us!!

  • @Stgpop
    @Stgpop Před 2 lety +2

    Thank you PBS for being solely about the facts. So many programs have failed over the years but you guys keep getting better with your wide variety of content covered. Truly the best publicly funded channel since I was a kid

  • @huehuecoyotl2
    @huehuecoyotl2 Před 2 lety +4

    These guys are all over the place in the Rio Grande Valley of Texas.

  • @xinceras-6542
    @xinceras-6542 Před 2 lety +4

    I've always wondered, is this specific fungus edible for humans as well? Could we cultivate it as a food source too?

  • @foster2095
    @foster2095 Před 2 lety

    alright youtube you've put this video in my recommended every single time I refresh it for the past month i'll watch the damn video

  • @duybear4023
    @duybear4023 Před 2 lety +18

    You should do LICHEN next. I hear they're fungus, algae, cyanobacteria, and somehow yeast.

  • @elkoraki779
    @elkoraki779 Před rokem +4

    Ants are farming, crows are taming wolves and monkeys are entering the stone age we aren't the only ones we are just early

  • @CAM-fq8lv
    @CAM-fq8lv Před rokem

    Fascinating content, superbly presented.

  • @patham9
    @patham9 Před 9 měsíci

    Ants amazed me since early childhood. Such amazing creatures!

  • @TheGinopilotino77
    @TheGinopilotino77 Před 2 lety +3

    I'm from Italy and since my childhood I saw ants carrying dead vegetable material in the hole (hay,flowers,dead stems)... I live in a pretty tuffy soil composition area hence prolonged soil moisture compared to a more clay soil so I was wondering if these ant species would practice agricolture... What do you think about it?

  • @johnquach8821
    @johnquach8821 Před 2 lety +4

    There are also farming Termites!
    Some farm fungi as well.

  • @AxleLotl
    @AxleLotl Před 2 lety +1

    I would never have guessed that the ants couldn't live without the fungi and the fungi without the ants...
    What a great video!