Ants independently evolved to farm fungus at least twice

1 year ago 42

Life

Fungus farming by ants has evolved independently in populations separated by the Atlantic Ocean – the latest example was observed in cocktail ants in Cameroon, which cultivate fungus to build their nests

By Jake Buehler

A cocktail ant cutting off a piece of a leaf

Piotr Naskrecki

In warm regions of the Americas, leafcutter ants farm the fungus that they eat, gathering bits of greenery to feed it. An entire ocean away, one species of ant in Africa uses a very similar fungus cultivation technique. The findings suggest that this complex ant-fungus relationship has evolved independently at least twice.

The nearly 50 species of leafcutter ant tirelessly carve and shuttle pieces of leaves back to their expansive subterranean nests, where they feed the bounty to a fungal culture …

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