The ants go marching one by one - 20 quadrillion of them
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[September 21, 2022]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The world's human
population is forecast to surpass 8 billion in the coming months.
Compared to ants, that is a mediocre milestone.
Researchers have made the most thorough assessment to date of the global
population of ants - insects that have colonized almost everywhere on
the planet - and the estimated total is a mind-blowing 20 quadrillion of
them, or approximately 2.5 million for every human.
It should come as little surprise considering how ubiquitous these busy
and social insects are and the fact that they have thrived since the age
of dinosaurs, with the oldest-known ant fossil dating back about 100
million years to the Cretaceous Period.
"Ants certainly play a very central role in almost every terrestrial
ecosystem," said entomologist Patrick Schultheiss of the University of
Würzburg in Germany and the University of Hong Kong, co-lead author of
the study published this week in the journal Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences.
"They are very important for nutrient cycling, decomposition processes,
plant seed dispersal and the perturbation of soil. Ants are also an
extremely diverse group of insects, with the different species
fulfilling a wide range of functions. But most of all, it is their high
abundance that makes them key ecological players," Schultheiss said.
There are more than 12,000 known species of ants, which generally are
black, brown or red in color and possess bodies segmented into three
parts. Ranging in size from about four-hundredths of an inch (1 mm) to
about 1.2 inches (3 cm) long, ants typically inhabit soil, leaf litter
or decaying plants - and occasionally human kitchens.
Ants, whose closest relatives are bees and wasps, are native to nearly
everywhere on Earth, as any picnicker knows, except Antarctica,
Greenland, Iceland and some island nations.
"I was amazed that the ants' biomass was higher than that of wild
mammals and birds combined, and that it reaches 20% of the human
biomass. That gives you an understanding of the scale of their impact,"
said insect ecologist and study co-lead author Sabine Nooten, also of
the University of Würzburg and University of Hong Kong.
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A zompopa ant reared for human
consumption is pictured in the insect farm of biologist Federico
Paniagua, as he promotes the ingestion of a wide variety of insects
as a low-cost and nutrient-rich food, in Grecia, Costa Rica July 13,
2019. REUTERS/Juan Carlos Ulate/File Photo
"I find the enormous diversity of ants fascinating. They can be tiny
or huge and show the most bizarre adaptations," Nooten added, citing
a widespread ant genus called Strumigenys, known for long mouthparts
with spikes used to hunt small invertebrates.
The researchers based their analysis on 489 studies of ant
populations spanning every continent where ants live.
"Our dataset represents a massive collecting effort of thousands of
scientists. We were then able to extrapolate the number of ants for
different regions of the world and estimate their total global
number and biomass," Schultheiss said.
Tropical regions were found to harbor many more ants than other
regions, with forests and drylands boasting more ants than urban
areas.
"There are certain parts of the world where we have little data and
we cannot reach reliable estimates for all continents. Africa is one
such example. We have long known that it is a very ant-rich
continent but also very under-studied," Schultheiss said.
Ants generally live in colonies, sometimes consisting of millions of
them divided into groups with different roles such as workers,
soldiers, and queens. The workers, all females, care for the bigger
queen and her offspring, maintain the nest, and forage for food.
Males mate with queens, then die.
"Some ants can certainly be very annoying, but that's a very
human-centered perspective," Schultheiss said.
"Most ants are actually highly beneficial, even to us humans,"
Schultheiss added. "Think about the amount of organic matter that 20
quadrillion ants transport, remove, recycle and eat. In fact, ants
are so essential for the smooth working of biological processes that
they can be seen as ecosystem engineers. The late ant scientist E.O.
Wilson once called them 'the little things that run the world.'"
(Reporting by Will Dunham, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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