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      Insects Living with Ants ( Myrmeciphilous Insects )

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            Abstract

            Ants are social insects found in various habitats, with over 20,000 species. They live in colonies and construct complex nests. Ants undergo complete metamorphosis and have queens, males, and workers. Workers perform various tasks, and ants communicate using chemical signals. Some insects form associations with ants, called myrmecophilous insects, adapting to avoid predation. Myrmecophilous insects can be obligate or facultative. Mutualistic relationships exist between ants and insects like aphids and lycaenid butterfly larvae. Ants also associate with other ant species, displaying cooperative or parasitic behaviours. Habitat destruction affects myrmecophilous species, like Maculinea arion. Studying these associations is valuable in entomology.

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            Author and article information

            Journal
            Journal of Ecological Society
            Ecological Society
            2278-0823
            1 April 2002
            : 15
            : 1
            : 9-11
            Article
            10.54081/JES.014/03
            a82c35f8-c934-447c-bcdb-01c6362f560a
            The Author

            Published under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International ( CC BY 4.0). Users are allowed to share (copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format) and adapt (remix, transform, and build upon the material for any purpose, even commercially), as long as the authors and the publisher are explicitly identified and properly acknowledged as the original source.

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            Categories

            The datasets generated during and/or analysed during the current study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.
            Ecology
            Ants,Myrmeciphilous Insects,Lycaenid Butterflies,Phytophagus,Phytopredaceuos,Predaceous,Secretion Feeders,Entemology

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