Crazy ants take on fire ants and win

Ars Technica » Scientific Method 2014-02-24

Fire ant, meet crazy ant.

If you’ve ever been attacked by red imported fire ants, you can likely attest that these tiny insects have a nasty defense mechanism. When threatened, fire ants inject or dab their enemy with a potent neurotoxic venom that quickly dispatches most other ants and can sometimes even send humans to the hospital.

This deadly assault is a pretty effective deterrent to most other ant species, which tend to keep their distance. But the fire ants have now run up against another invasive species that's willing to take them on: the tawny crazy ant. This unassuming little ant has the surprising habit of aggressively barreling right into a colony of fire ants, seemingly undeterred by their toxic venom.

In this week’s issue of Science, researchers from the University of Texas at Austin report that crazy ants are actually able to detoxify fire ants’ venom, helping them displace this usually dominant species.

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