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Ants communicate with each other using pheromones, sounds, and touch. The use of pheromones as chemical signals is more developed in ants than many other insect groups. Similar to other insects, ants perceive smells with their antennae and thus possess a fascinating and admirable ability to smell.
Why Do Ants Need to Smell?
Ants have a perceptive sense of smell that enables them to locate suitable mates, locate food, locate their nest, assemble individuals to fight off nest predators, plus recognize and communicate with groups or castes that comprise their colony.
The ant’s ability to smell revolves around the production and recognition of odor signals (pheromones) that function by interacting with one another.
Plants also emit pheromone cues, which also dictate ants and other insect behaviors. Pheromones surround an ant’s habitat so an ant’s ability to detect and segregate scent-filled environments requires a very complex and sophisticated system of odor detection.
How Does it Work?
How does this sophisticated system of odor recognition work for ants? A study conducted by researchers at Vanderbilt University found that insects possess several types of olfactory (related to smell) sense organs, which collect pheromone signals.
Most of these smell-gathering organs are located in the ant’s antennae, but some ant species may have the organs located on the mouthparts or even the genitalia. To better understand what happens when an ant smells a chemical odor, we can look at a simple explanation the process: