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         Ants:     more books (99)
  1. Hey, Little Ant by Phillip M. Hoose, Hannah Hoose, 1998-07-01
  2. One Hundred Hungry Ants by Elinor J Pinczes, Elinor Pinczes, 1999-09
  3. Two Bad Ants by Chris Van Allsburg, 1988-10-24
  4. Adventures among Ants: A Global Safari with a Cast of Trillions by Mark W. Moffett, 2010-05-05
  5. The Life and Times of the Ant by Charles Micucci, 2006-04-17
  6. Ant Cities (Let's-Read-and-Find-Out Science 2) by Arthur Dorros, 1988-06-03
  7. Are You an Ant? (Backyard Books) by Judy Allen, Tudor Humphries, 2004-05-13
  8. Ant Farm: And Other Desperate Situations by Simon Rich, 2007-04-03
  9. Black Ants and Buddhists by Mary Cowhey, 2006-04
  10. "I Can't" Said the Ant by Polly Cameron, 1975
  11. Ant: The Definitive Guide, 2nd Edition by Steve Holzner, 2005-04-13
  12. National Geographic Readers: Ants by Melissa Stewart, 2010-01-12
  13. Stand and Deliver: The Autobiography by Adam Ant, 2007-09
  14. I Saw an Ant on the Railroad Track by Joshua Prince, 2006-04-28

1. GAKKEN'S PHOTO ENCYCLOPEDIA "ANTS" : Contents
Helps teens identify the difference between ants and mimicking ants with an emphasis on ant species, Category Kids and Teens School Time Invertebrates Insects ants...... Various ants ants showing curious behavior. How to catch ants 1. When you catch onlyone ant 2. Catching many ants 3. Let's break off a dacayed branch of a tree.
http://ant.edb.miyakyo-u.ac.jp/INTRODUCTION/Gakken79E/Page_02.html
C O N T E N T S
Ant meals

Very fond of insects, sweet foods and seeds
Very fond of seeds
Carry 2,400 insects to their nest per day ...
Ant species
Various ants
Ants showing curious behavior
Insects mimicking ants

Insects mimicking ants
Termite, Jumping spider, Velvet ant
Other insects mimicking the ant
Larvae of chinch bug, Ant loving beetle, Rove beetle How to catch ants
1. When you catch only one ant
2. Catching many ants
3. Let's break off a dacayed branch of a tree ...
12. How many workers are born in one nest? Index

2. The Advanced .NET Testing System
Check out technical specifications and system requirements for this free, downloadable utility. Authors include support options and customer testimonials. ants Profiler pinpoints slow lines of code in .NET application, letting developers optimize poorly performing
http://www.red-gate.com/advanced_dotnet_testing_system.htm
home products shop newsletter ... free trial Detailed information

3. The Source For Information About Ant Colony Life And Founding
Resource for ant enthusiasts includes a message board and articles on starting and maintaining ant colonies. Recommends books and videos on the subject. a century, scientists have known that certain species of ants subsist by raiding other ant colonies and turning their
http://www.antcolony.org/
You can also view ANTCOLONY.ORG in the following languages; Chinese Dutch French German ... Portuguese/Brazilian . Your software has to support the foreign language. Bookmark this Site Home Message Board News Room ... Ant FAQ
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Our Community Why About Antcolony.org Become Member Advertising ... Links Departments Colonies on Exhibition Books About Ants Ant FAQ ... Ant FAQ Illustrations Photomicrographs Snapshots SEM Visit AnTropolis Ant History Ant Rearing Ants For Beginners ... Behavior II Contact Link with us Policy Statement Contact Us Feedback ... Credits Species Fire Ants Army Ants Leaf Cutter Ants Carpenter Ants ... Report a bad link Antcolony.Org is looking for news and content to keep this website fresh.
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will hp depot ... will From the Same Ant Species, Different Behavior By Louis Jacobson
click to view
For more than a century, scientists have known that certain species of ants subsist by raiding other ant colonies and turning their offspring into slaves. But researchers have known relatively little about how these "slavemaking" ants actually operate in the wild until now.

4. Ants Recruitment Is Closed
ants Recruitment is no longer operating in Ireland
http://www.ants.ie/

5. Retired Robots - The Ants
The ants are a community of cubicinch microrobots at the MIT Artificial Intelligence Lab.
http://www.ai.mit.edu/projects/ants
Retired Robots
The Ants: A Community of Microrobots
The Ants are a community of cubic-inch microrobots at the MIT Artificial Intelligence Lab . There are two main goals for this project. The first is to push the limits of microrobotics by integrating many sensors and actuators into a small package. The second is to form a structured robotic community from the interactions of many simple individuals. The inspiration behind this idea comes from nature the ant colony. In order to accomplish these goals, the robots have been equipped with sensors and actuators designed with their natural counterparts in mind. Each robot has 17 sensors including; four light sensors, four IR (infrared) receivers, bump sensors, food sensors, and a tilt sensor. They communicate with each other using two IR emitters, one mounted on the front of the robot and one mounted on the top. There are several levels of social behavior before reaching the goal of the ant colony. Right now, the robots can play Follow the Leader, Tag and Manhunt . Manhunt is similar to tag except there are two teams. The final game before the full-fledged Ant Farm is Capture the Flag. There are many application for robotic communities, including

6. BEHAVIOR OF REAL ANTS
Explanations of what ants are capable of doing along with some ant facts. Features picture diagrams Category Kids and Teens School Time Invertebrates Insects ants......BEHAVIOR OF REAL ants. Consider the following figure in which ants aremoving on a straight line which connects a food source to the nest
http://iridia.ulb.ac.be/~mdorigo/ACO/RealAnts.html
BEHAVIOR OF REAL ANTS
It is well-known that the main means used by ants to form and maintain the line is a pheromone trail. Ants deposit a certain amount of pheromone while walking, and each ant probabilistically prefers to follow a direction rich in pheromone rather than a poorer one. This elementary behavior of real ants can be used to explain how they can find the shortest path which reconnects a broken line after the sudden appearance of an unexpected obstacle has interrupted the initial path (see next figure). In fact, once the obstacle has appeared, those ants which are just in front of the obstacle cannot continue to follow the pheromone trail and therefore they have to choose between turning right or left. In this situation we can expect half the ants to choose to turn right and the other half to turn left. The very same situation can be found on the other side of the obstacle (see next figure). It is interesting to note that those ants which choose, by chance, the shorter path around the obstacle will more rapidly reconstitute the interrupted pheromone trail compared to those which choose the longer path. Hence, the shorter path will receive a higher amount of pheromone in the time unit and this will in turn cause a higher number of ants to choose the shorter path. Due to this positive feedback (autocatalytic) process, very soon all the ants will choose the shorter path (see next figure). The most interesting aspect of this autocatalytic process is that finding the shortest path around the obstacle seems to be an emergent property of the interaction between the obstacle shape and ants distributed behavior: Although all ants move at approximately the same speed and deposit a pheromone trail at approximately the same rate, it is a fact that it takes longer to contour obstacles on their longer side than on their shorter side which makes the pheromone trail accumulate quicker on the shorter side. It is the ants preference for higher pheromone trail levels which makes this accumulation still quicker on the shorter path.

7. Texas Red Imported Fire Ant Project
Research and management of the fire ant from Texas Agricultural Experiment Station, Texas AgriculturalExtension Service, Texas Department of Agriculture, Texas Tech University,University of Texas, and Texas Parks and Wildlife.
http://fireant.tamu.edu/

LISTEN TO FIRE ANT NOISES!

No one knows why yet, but we do know how fire ants make noise. By rubbing the thorax against the abdomen, they create sounds called stridulations Have you done the Texas Two-Step?
Organic Method*

Non-Organic Method*

Watch videos

* Reading PDF requires free Acrobat Reader New report from UCS describes the threat from invasive species in Texas. [PDF]
Revised Six-Year Fire Ant Plan 2004-2010 now available... (more)
USDA/CMAVE Fire Ant Range Maps now available... (more)
See Survey Results.... (more)

8. Myrmecology - The Scientific Study Of Ants.
Extensive directory provides photos and information regarding foraging, nest building, and other ant behavioral activities. Includes a chat room.
http://www.myrmecology.org/
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9. Ants'2000 Home
From Ant Colonies to Artificial ants 2nd International Workshop on Ant Algorithms. Brussels, Belgium, Category Computers Artificial Life Conferences Past Conferences...... Note that just after ants'2000 there will be in Paris (85 minutes by train fromBrussels) two related conferences SAB2000, September 1115, and PPSN VI
http://iridia.ulb.ac.be/~ants/ants2000/
Conference email address: ants@iridia.ulb.ac.be Call for papers in pdf (0.2 MB) and postscript (1.3 MB) format. NEW General information about Brussels and Accomodations in Brussels is available here The behavior of social insects in general, and of ants living in colonies in particular, has since long time fascinated researchers in ethology and animal behavior, who have proposed many models to explain their capabilities.
Recently, ant algorithms have been proposed as a novel computational approach that replaces the traditional emphasis on control, preprogramming, and centralization with designs featuring autonomy, emergence, and distributed functioning. These designs are proving flexible and robust, able to adapt quickly to changing environments and to continue functioning even when individual elements fail.
A particularly successful research direction in ant algorithms, known as " Ant Colony Optimization is dedicated to their application to discrete optimization problems. Ant Colony Optimization has been applied successfully to a large number of difficult combinatorial problems like the quadratic assignment and the traveling salesman problems, to routing in telecommunications networks, scheduling, and other problems.
ANTS'2000 is the second edition of the only event entirely devoted to ant algorithms and to Ant Colony Optimization . Of great interest to the workshop are also models of real ant colonies organization and functioning which could stimulate new algorithmic approaches.

10. Ants
Generalized ants. This is some supplementary material to the paper Further Travels with My Ant by David Gale, Jim Propp,
http://www.math.sunysb.edu/~scott/ants
Generalized Ants
This is some supplementary material to the paper Further Travels with My Ant by David Gale, Jim Propp Scott Sutherland , and Serge Troubetzkoy , which appears in the Summer 1995 issue of the Mathematical Intelligencer . In this paper, the some behavior of a cellular automaton called an "ant" is discussed. The ant moves about, and in each "cell", the ant turns right or left, depending on the the state of the cell, and then changes the state of the cell according to certain prescribed rule strings.
Briefly, an "ant" moves around on an infinite checkerboard, each square of which we refer to as a "cell". Each cell in the plane is labeled as either an L -cell or an R -cell (usually, one fills the plane with L -cells to start). The ant starts out on the boundary between two cells, and as it passes through each cell, it makes a 90 degree turn, turning to the left in L -cells and to the right in R -cells, and it changes the state of the cell it just left, switching L -cells to R -cells, and vice versa. Following this simple set of rules gives rise to some rather complicated behavior; the pattern of the ant's track alternates between apparent chaos and symmetry, and eventually it starts to build a "highway" moving off in a single direction. The above described ant (and some variations) was originally studied by Chris Langton (then at the Santa Fe Institute , more recently a co-founder of the Swarm Corporation ). Later, Jim Propp generalized the ant by considering each cell to be in one of

11. All About Ants
Learn all about ants, how they live and ant anatomy.
http://www.infowest.com/life/aants.htm
All About Ants Ants have been living on the Earth for more than 100 million years and can be found almost anywhere on the planet. It is estimated that there are about 20,000 different species of ants. For this reason ants have been called Earth's most successful species. Ants build many different types of homes. Many ants build simple little mounds out of dirt or sand. Other ants use small sticks mixed with dirt and sand to make a stronger mound that offers protection from rain. Western Harvester ants make a small mound on top, but then tunnel up to 15 feet straight down to hibernate during winter. Ant mounds consist of many chambers connected by tunnels. Different chambers are used for nurseries, food storage, and resting places for the worker ants. Some ants live in wood like termites. Army ants don't make a home at all but travel in large groups searching for food. Sociology: Ants are social insects, which means they live in large colonies or groups. Some colonies consist of millions of ants. There are three types of ants in each species, the queen, the sterile female workers, and males. The male ants only serve one purpose, to mate with future queen ants and do not live very long. The queen grows to adulthood, mates, and then spends the rest of her life laying eggs. A colony may have only one queen, or there may be many queens depending on the species. Ants go through four stages of development: egg, larva, pupa, and adult. Anatomy: Ants have three main parts. The head, the trunk(middle section), and the rear or metasoma. All six legs are attached to the trunk. The head consists of the jaws, eyes, and antennae. The eyes of ants are made up of many lenses enabling them to see movement very well. The antennae are special organs of smell, touch, taste, and hearing. The metasoma contains the stomach and rectum. Many species of ants have poison sacks and/or stingers in the end of the metasoma for defense against their many predators. To see a diagram and learn more about ant anatomy visit our

12. A Checklist Of The Ants Of Michigan
The taxonomy of the 113 ant species recorded in Michigan, with an introduction describing the history of Michigan myrmecology.
http://insects.ummz.lsa.umich.edu/fauna/MICHANTS.html
CHECKLIST OF THE ANTS OF MICHIGAN
(HYMENOPTERA: FORMICIDAE) George C. Wheeler[1], Jeanette N. Wheeler[2], and Paul B. Kannowski[3]
[1]Deceased.,[2]Research Associates, Florida State Collection of Arthropods. Address: 3338 NE 58th Avenue, Silver Springs, FL 34488-9464.
[3]Adjunct Curator of Insects, Museum of Zoology, University of Michigan. Address: Department of Biology, University of North Dakota, Grand Forks, ND 58202-9019. (NOTE: This document has been slightly modified for the WWW from its original appearance in Vol.26, No. 1 of the Great Lakes Entomologist , pp. 297-310, 1994.)
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION RESULTS ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ... FORMICINAE ABSTRACT A total of 113 species of ants is recorded by county from the state of Michigan. The list is based upon literature records and specimens in the authors' collections and those of the University of Michigan Museum of Zoology and the Michigan State University Department of Entomology. The list includes 3 species in Ponerinae, 44 in Myrmicinae, 6 in Dolichoderinae, and 60 in Formicinae. Ten species represent new state records. Five distribution patterns are evident: statewide (39 species), southern counties only (5), southern 3/4th of Lower Peninsula (10), Lower Peninsula (17), and Upper Peninsula (2). Forty species have been collected too infrequently to determine the distribution within the state.
INTRODUCTION The earliest record of ants collected in Michigan is W. M. Wheeler's (1905) description of

13. ANTs Software Inc.
Software to speed up database transactions. Product information, benchmarks, and white paper.
http://www.antssoftware.com

ANTs Names Gary Ebersole President and Chief Operating Officer
ANTs software inc. is a developer of software technology that enables high-performance data operations. Our mission is to help customers reduce hardware, software, and development costs by providing exceptional performance in transaction-intensive applications. The ANTs Database Accelerator
ANTs Database Accelerator
The benefits of using ADA are significant:
  • The total cost of ownership of your existing applications will decrease as CPU resources are used more effectively with no locking Applications scale more efficiently Instant roll-up of dynamic data can enable new reporting or analysis applications not currently feasible Business considerations, rather than database limitations, can drive data architecture and application design
At the core of ADA is the ANTs Data Server a standards-compliant relational database designed for high volume, high contention applications.

14. Science And Nature Projects, Kits And Gifts
A resource site of science and nature fun activities, strange facts, photos, illusions and products. Interesting stuff for both kids and parents.
http://www.atomsandants.com/
Fascinating Photos! Exciting Gifts! Fun Activities! Strange Facts! Explore....Discover....Learn....and Have Fun! Click Here to Enter! Bugs Stars/Space Illusions ... Brought to you by Treasure Publications, Inc.
Science and Nature is a fascinating area for children to learn about the everyday world around them! Performing science projects and playing with science kits, and other science and nature toys, provides hours of fascinating learning that will last a lifetime!

15. The Ants Are My Friends
Misheard lyrics (mondegreens)
http://www.thechicagoloop.net/lyrics/
This page isn't here. It's gone off into the wide world to find itself. It might come back one day.

16. Adam And The Ants : -=www.adamandtheants.da.ru=-
An Australian site that includes a profile, discography, news, images, MP3 music files, and reviews.
http://www.geocities.com/TelevisionCity/Studio/8022/aata.html

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17. The Ants Of West Africa & The Congo Basin
An electronic book covering geography history, ant mosaics, economic importance of ants, biodiversity niches, and taxonomy.
http://research.amnh.org/entomology/social_insects/ants/westafrica/

CONTENTS
UNDERSTANDING THE SITE AND QUICK ACCESS PAGES
Preface - with explanatory notes Frontispiece and Summary - a Quick Tour of the Ants of Nigerian Cocoa, with links to the main text The Many Faces of West African Ants - a selection of the many genera of ants, with links to the main text Taxonomic Name Indices - to find species names, modern and historic, and coded "forms" listed in modern literature Spreadsheet summary catalogue - with name, type location, date of first description or listing, countries from which known, frequency of occurrence, and bionomics for each of the species and forms covered in the main catalogue below (Microsoft Excel 2000 .xls worksheet). List of Maps, Illustrations, Figures and Tables Images of ants from the Cameroun and Guinea
BIOLOGY AND DISTRIBUTION
Chapter 1 - Introduction Chapter 3 - Mosaics - Introduction
THE CATALOGUE
KEY TO SUBFAMILIES Subfamily Aenictinae - Genus Aenictus with list of species plus one subsection Subfamily Aenictogitoninae - Genus ... Dorylus with key to subgenera

18. Ants-ANT CONTROL FAQ'S
my yard had hundreds of what appeared to be darkcolored, white-winged ants coming out of the ground and flying away.
http://www.doyourownpestcontrol.com/antask.htm
Ant Control
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When I spray the ants, they just move. How can I kill them? When an ant colony can't be located, use a poison bait. The toxicant is passed throughout the colony, killing the queen and all worker ants. Do carpenter ants eat wood? No. Carpenter ants will tunnel into wood, usually soft decaying wood to make their nests. I have a large carpenter ant, but both ends of its body are black, and the middle is red or orange. What kind of ant is this? Sounds like Florida carpenter ants. They are just a different color than regular carpenter ants. Use the same treatment you would for regular carpenter ants. Over this past weekend I noticed that my yard had hundreds of what appeared to be dark-colored, white-winged ants coming out of the ground and flying away. Most of the ant holes had lots of smaller ants without wings around them. It has been wet for about a week now and Saturday was a very humid and sunny day. After it rained that night, these insects were gone and I haven't seen a one since. Does this sound like ants? My home is being treated by a termite service with a Sentracon System and has been under treatment over the last 6 months. Any answers you can provide, or products you could recommend would be a great help. Thanks in advance.

19. Carpenter Ants
This University of Kentucky site offers detailed information about behavior and physiology of the Category Science Biology Arthropoda Insecta Hymenoptera ants...... CARPENTER ants. by Mike Potter, Extension Entomologist I keep seeing big,black ants in my house, especially in the kitchen and bathroom.
http://www.uky.edu/Agriculture/Entomology/entfacts/struct/ef603.htm
University of Kentucky Entomology
CARPENTER ANTS
by Mike Potter, Extension Entomologist University of Kentucky College of Agriculture
"I keep seeing big, black ants in my house, especially in the kitchen and bathroom. I spray the ones I see, but they keep coming back. What kind of ants are these, where do they come from, and how do I get rid of them?"
USDA Insect and Plant Disease Slide Set These are the questions typically asked by homeowners who have carpenter ants. Carpenter ants are one of the most common ants found in Kentucky. They are also one of the most difficult to control. This publication will help you determine if you have carpenter ants, and provide tips on how to control them.
Biology and Habits
Carpenter ants, vary in size and color but are usually large (1/4-1/2 inch) and blackish. Occasionally, swarms of winged carpenter ant reproductives will emerge inside a home. Carpenter ant swarms usually occur in the spring and are a sure sign that a colony is nesting somewhere inside the structure.
University of Kentucky Entomology
University of Kentucky Entomology Winged carpenter ants can be distinguished from termites by their larger size and shape of their antennae, waist and wings.

20. Elephants & Ants
Specializing in web design, online marketing, advertising, and Internet plus Intranet site development.
http://www.elephantsandants.com/

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