Submitted by marcoroman3 t3_ze5xqy in askscience
[deleted] t1_iz5a2e1 wrote
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StupidPencil t1_iz6g54u wrote
Note that ants and other social insects do have an ability to regurgitate stomach content to share it with other nestmates. It's called trophallaxis. It effectively allows nutrients and other biochemical to be freely distributed throughout a whole colony, acting kinda like a circulatory system.
[deleted] t1_iz6l6d8 wrote
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[deleted] t1_iz6usmw wrote
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svarogteuse t1_izen9ob wrote
Regurgitate from the stomach or from some other organ? Honey bees regurgitate from the honey crop which is located higher in the digestive tract than the stomach.
StupidPencil t1_izf7fxf wrote
From the crop right before the midgut.
The most extreme example is probably honeypot ant.
I think it probably share many similarities with bees and wasps since they all belong to Hymenoptera.
Otherwise_Day_4485 t1_iz5ni6z wrote
How about farting? Do ants fart? 🐜💨
Krail t1_iz7vua7 wrote
I don't know the answer for sure, but the prevalence of farting in Humans is generally a consequence of microbes in our gut digesting our food for us and putting off gasses as a byproduct. There are other reasons gasses end up in your digestive tract, but this is the big one.
I don't know if ants are as reliant on microbes for their digestion as we are, but they definitely have less room for gas in their guts. But then, you'd expect ant farts to be tiny anyway.
[deleted] t1_izp8299 wrote
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[deleted] t1_iz60cmu wrote
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Picolete t1_iz66yh5 wrote
Dont give them ideas, now greenpeace will want to ban antfarms for the CO2
[deleted] t1_iz8oku2 wrote
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[deleted] t1_iz5ksi7 wrote
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Myotherdog t1_iz7pxmg wrote
Interesting. Is an insects digestive system in any way comparable to ours?
[deleted] t1_iz8y224 wrote
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