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The
body of an ant is clearly divided into three
sections: the head, the thorax, and the gaster.
(The narrow waist is actually within the abdomen,
so the part of the abdomen behind the waist
is called the gaster.) The waist can be made
up of one or two small segments, depending on
the species. Ants are social insects living
in colonies comprised of one or a few queens,
and many workers. The queen generally stays
deep and safe within a nest. Most ants that
you see are workers and these are all females.
Depending on species, workers may be similar
in size, or come in a range of sizes. Ants tend
to come in dark or earth tones. Different species
are black, earth-tone reds, pale tans, and basic
browns.
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Caveat:
Ants are very diverse and it is difficult
to generalize about them. Adult Males and
Females When ant colonies reproduce, the new
queens and males may be found in the colony.
These
are "flying ants" and have two pairs of wings.
Males generally have small heads, large eyes,
large thoraces, and a pair of claspers at
the end of the gaster. Once they fly (and
mate), males do not live very long. After
mating, new queens break off their wings and
never fly again. Without wings, they can generally
be distinguished from workers by their larger
body size, larger thorax and larger abdomen.
All workers are females.
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