Page 1
Page 1
Started By
Message

Dracula Ant

Posted on 12/22/18 at 7:48 am
Posted by Trumansfangs
Town & Country
Member since Sep 2018
6894 posts
Posted on 12/22/18 at 7:48 am
Fast strike. Science fascinates me.

______________________________________


In n the tropics of Africa, Asia and Australia dwells an elusive genus of ant known as the Dracula ant, so called because its adult members feed on the blood of their larvae. The insects spend most of their time scurrying underground or in tree trunks, so they are difficult to study. But as Douglas Quenqua reports for the New York Times, researchers were recently able to take a closer look at how one species of Dracula ant wields its powerful mandibles—and in doing so they have revealed that this tiny critter boasts the fastest known appendage of any animal.

Andrew Suarez, an animal biology and entomology professor at the University of Illinois, managed to collect specimens of the Mystrium camillae species in Borneo in 2014. He and his colleagues—among them Fredrick Larabee, an entomologist at the Smithsonian Natural History Museum—examined the ants at Duke University, using a remarkably fast camera that can capture up to one million frames per second. The team also used X-ray imaging to study the insects’ anatomy in three dimensions, and conducted computer simulations to show how the mandible shape of different Dracula ant castes affects their snapping power.

The results of the team’s investigation, published in Royal Society Open Science, showed that Mystrium camillae can snap its mandibles at a speed of up to 90 meters per second (more than 200 miles per hour). That’s 5,000 times faster than the blink of an eye, and three times faster than the mandible-snapping speed of the trap-jaw ant, previously the fastest insect known to scientists. It takes only 0.000015 seconds for the jaws of the Dracula ant to accelerate to their maximum speed.




More here : Smithsonian

Posted by Arksulli
Fayetteville
Member since Aug 2014
25179 posts
Posted on 12/22/18 at 9:01 am to
quote:

he results of the team’s investigation, published in Royal Society Open Science, showed that Mystrium camillae can snap its mandibles at a speed of up to 90 meters per second (more than 200 miles per hour).


That is amazing. The Mantis Shrimp beats its prey to death by hitting them with a pincer at 51 MPH. That's fast enough that the prey animal takes a second blow from the cavitation bubbles collapsing and forming an underwater shock wave.

But this ant is 4 times faster in its strike which is just mind boggling.
Posted by KSGamecock
The Woodlands, TX
Member since May 2012
22982 posts
Posted on 12/22/18 at 5:13 pm to
Do they suck their own larvae’s blood or the blood of larvae of different insects?
Posted by deeprig9
Unincorporated Ozora, Georgia
Member since Sep 2012
63906 posts
Posted on 12/22/18 at 8:15 pm to
Look up dirt daubers keeping zombie spiders.

Posted by BlackPawnMartyr
Houston, TX
Member since Dec 2010
15300 posts
Posted on 12/28/18 at 1:53 pm to
ANTSCANADA an entertaining ants youtube channel has a farm of this type.

ANTSCANDA YOUTUBE
Posted by Cheese Grits
Wherever I lay my hat is my home
Member since Apr 2012
54622 posts
Posted on 12/29/18 at 9:04 pm to
quote:

But this ant is 4 times faster in its strike which is just mind boggling.


My science is a bit rusty but air offers less resistance than water. While 4x seems faster, relative to surrounding resistance, does that diminish the speed below 4x?
first pageprev pagePage 1 of 1Next pagelast page
refresh

Back to top
logoFollow SECRant for SEC Football News
Follow us on Twitter and Facebook to get the latest updates on SEC Football and Recruiting.

FacebookTwitter