Bizarrely, Iberian harvester ant queens lay eggs that turn into male builder harvester ants, and some of her offspring are ...
Researchers have uncovered an unusual survival strategy in Iberian harvester ants that turns basic biology on its head: The queens can produce eggs that develop into two different ant species.
When an animal parent has a child, both will belong to the same species. Humans beget humans, combfish beget combfish, and ...
The researchers even coined a word for it, xenoparity, meaning “foreign birth”. It pushes the boundaries of what we mean by ...
Iberian harvester ant queens produce offspring of their own species and of the builder harvester ant, seemingly by cloning ...
Insects are essential for ecosystems, but mounting evidence suggests many populations are collapsing under modern pressures.
Scientists discover that a queen ants of the Messor genus produce males from another species to breed hybrid workers in ...
Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
Fiji’s Ants Are Struggling. Scientists Say They’re Part of the Broader ‘Insect Apocalypse’
New research finds that 79 percent of Fiji's endemic ant species—those that are native to and only found on the ...
This process—the team dubs it “xenoparous,” meaning that an organism gives birth to another species as part of its life cycle ...
Live Science on MSN
'Almost like science fiction': European ant is the first known animal to clone members of another species
A species of ant found scurrying across southern Europe is the first animal found that clones males of another species.
Anime battles today have amazing production value and choreography, but a vast majority don't hold a candle to 2011's Hunter ...
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