Ants farm root aphid clones in subterranean rooms

Monday, July 2, 2012 - 09:30 in Biology & Nature

The yellow meadow ant, Lasius flavus, farms root aphids for sugar (honeydew) and nitrogen (protein). In turn these species of aphids have developed distinctive traits never found in free living species such as the ‘trophobiotic organ’ to hold honey dew for the ants. New research shows that over half of ant mounds contained only one of the three most common  species of aphid, and two thirds of these has a single aphid clone. Even in mounds which contained more than one species of aphid 95% of the aphid chambers contained individuals of a single clone.

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