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The Many Faces of Ants -
Humans have many different types of faces, but none of them are as different as
the collection of ant faces below.
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You can tell a lot about an ant from its face. The shape of the head and
mandibles and size of the eyes can reveal the diet and lifestyle of an ant
species. Here are some examples of how the structure of an ant’s head
corresponds to its function. Once you have learned about all these heads on this
page or using the printable ant head summary, try
out our
ant head match game. Just download
the PDF and grab your pencil or pen to see how well you know your ants.
| Ant Type |
Drawing of Ant Head |
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| A typical ant has broad, triangular mandibles with short, pointy teeth. These
multi-purpose tools can be used for biting, carrying, digging, and other jobs. |
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| An army ant solider (Eciton) has massive, hooked mandibles with sharp blades
at the tips. They are used to pierce the skin of larger vertebrate predators
that threaten the colony. Also note the tiny simple (not compound) eyes – army
ants are effectively blind, relying on chemical trails and touch to find their
way around in the dark rainforest. |
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| This big-headed ant major (Pheidole) has heavy, blunt mandibles powered by a
muscular head. It crushes hard seeds that the smaller minor workers harvest but cannot
crack. |
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| Bull-dog ants (Myrmecia) have huge, bulging eyes and excellent vision for hunting insect
prey. These vicious predators also have long narrow mandibles with big teeth. As their
name implies, bull-dog ants can be quite aggressive – workers of some species
are known to jump toward human intruders! |
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| A leafcutter ant (Atta) has powerful mandibles that slice through leaves like
serrated scissors. The leading mandible is anchored into the leaf while the
other one is pulled along to make the cut. Leafcutter ants don’t eat the
vegetation they collect - they use it to grow fungus, their only source of food.
So they are the farmers of the ant world. |
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| The marvelous ant (Thaumatomyrmex) has pitch-fork mandibles that are used to
grasp its special prey - millipedes covered with long bristles like
porcupines. While the ant grips a millipede with its mandibles, it strips off
the bristles with pads on its front feet. Once the prey is plucked clean, it is
eaten head-first. |
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| A trap-jaw ant (Odontomachus) hunts with its mandibles locked wide open and
sensitive trigger hairs pointing forward. When the hairs touch a target, energy
is released from big muscles in the head, and the mandibles slam shut in a fast
and powerful snap. The closing of the mandibles is one of the fastest movements
in the animal kingdom – up to 145 miles per hour! That’s 2,300 times faster than
the blink of a human eye! Trap-jaw ants use their speedy mandibles to capture
springtails and other quick insects. But they can also be used for defense –
when a trap-jaw ant points its head down and snaps its mandibles against a hard
surface, it launches into the air, out of harm’s way. |
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| A turtle ant major (Cephalotes) has an armored, plate-shaped disc covering
the front of its head. The disc is perfectly sized to block the nest entrance
like a door, preventing enemies from getting inside. |
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