The year the leaf-cutter ants took Manhattan

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Thursday, May 16, 2024


The year the leaf-cutter ants took Manhattan
Leaf-cutter ants at the American Museum of Natural History in New York, April 18, 2023. In January, the American Museum of Natural History’s new insectarium gained 500,000 tenants. It has taken them some time to find their footing. (Todd Heisler/The New York Times)

by Emily Anthes



NEW YORK, NY.- It was a cold, gray afternoon in December, and at the American Museum of Natural History, 500,000 leaf-cutter ants were hunkered down in their homes.

The ants typically spend their days harvesting slivers of leaves, which they use to grow expansive fungal gardens that serve as both food and shelter. On many days, visitors to the museum’s insectarium can watch an endless river of ants transporting leaf fragments from the foraging area to the fungus-filled glass orbs where they live.

But on Tuesday, the flow of leaf-cutter ants had slowed to a trickle, with just a few intrepid insects visibly living up to their name.

It was hard to blame them. It was a biting, blustery day — and the end of a long, eventful year for the colony. The tropical ants, which had been harvested in Trinidad and nurtured in Oregon, had never set foot in New York City before last December, arriving like 500,000 insect ingénues. It took time for the ants to find their footing and for museum employees to learn how to create a happy home for them.

The work is not over yet. As winter returns, the museum is making more tweaks to the exhibit, a fitting capstone to a year that has featured a lot of learning through trial and error.

“We knew that we were going to do a lot of problem solving during the first year,” said Hazel Davies, the museum’s director of living exhibits. “We’ve been doing these mini science experiments constantly.”

When the ants first moved into the exhibit in January, the curators knew it would take them some time to adjust. But the transition was slower than expected. Davies and her colleagues spent weeks trying to coax the ants along the labyrinthine path that led from the fungal gardens to the leaf-packed foraging area. During those early weeks, the ants foraged so little that their fungal gardens started shrinking.

A major problem, the team soon realized, was that the air was too cold and dry for the ants, which preferred warm, humid weather. Not only was it winter in New York, but the museum’s brand-new insectarium was still under construction, making climate control difficult.

So the museum installed a humidifier behind the display case and devised temporary shortcuts to make foraging easier. By the time the insectarium opened in May, the colony was humming.

The ants thrived during the sticky summer months, harvesting leaves so rapidly that the foraging area required daily restocking. Staff members experimented with a variety of leaves, including maple, azalea and mulberry, which turned out to be a favorite. Sometimes they even treated the ants to what they called “fast food,” providing old-fashioned oats, which the ants did not need to cut before harvesting. (“They basically grab a piece of oat and go,” Davies said.)

Over time, the ants rebuilt the fungus they had lost and then some. “So we have had these wild animals living in the building and really thriving,” said Jessica Ware, a curator and the division chair of invertebrate zoology at the museum.

Davies and her colleagues were proactive as winter approached, adding a water heater to the exhibit and covering the display case with a blanket at night.

Still, on some really cold, dry days, they have found themselves facing familiar climatic challenges. So they have been coaxing some reluctant ants out onto the foraging platform with a trail of leaves, and they recently installed an additional humidifier inside the exhibit. They hope that the new humidifier will be enough to keep the ants active in the months ahead.

Despite these challenges, the colony is growing, and the ants have started several fungal gardens in the past few weeks, Davies said. Even on the coldest days, the insects haven’t lost their hustle. Although few ants were actively foraging last week, they were busy performing chores, including taking out the trash, at home.

In some ways, the past year has been a testament to the ants’ resilience. Even during the difficult weeks last spring, Ryan Garrett, a self-described ant wrangler who collected the colony for the museum, never doubted that the ants could make it in New York.

After all, since collecting the colony in 2018, Garrett has watched it grow from a few hundred ants with a golf-ball-size fungal garden to a 500,000-ant powerhouse with enough fungus to fill a 50-gallon trash can. “I never lost faith in this colony,” he said. “I know what they can do.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










Today's News

December 25, 2023

The year the leaf-cutter ants took Manhattan

"Ingenuity Mars Helicopter" prototype joins the National Air and Space Museum Collection

Giovanni Anselmo, a leader of the arte povera movement, dies at 89

The Museum of Fine Arts, St. Petersburg debuts "The Nature of Art"

Smithsonian-led study reveals five new species of soft-furred hedgehogs from southeast Asia

Ibon Aranberri returns to Museo Reina Sofía with the anthological exhibition 'Partial View'

'Zwischen den Jahren' by Valentin Goppel to be published January 2024

Drunken, youthful poems unearthed from the '90s

Another dimension into Dan Lam's oozing sculptures opens this December at Hashimoto Contemporary

On-screen, Fantasia Barrino-Taylor turns pain into a powerful joy

Sakshi Gallery opens "One Hundred Moments Of Solitude - Paramjit Singh"

Smithsonian names three members to the National Museum of the American Latino board of trustees

White Cube announces representation of Lygia Pape

Researchers, Coast Salish People analyze 160-year-old Indigenous dog pelt in the Smithsonian's Collection

Rice University's new engineering and science building opens

The great experiment that is 'The Color Purple'

Arts-based social prescribing comes to Stanford

Carlos Lyra, composer who brought finesse to bossa nova, dies at 90

Why we can't get enough of cult documentaries

What to know about 'Maestro': A guide to Bradley Cooper's Bernstein biopic

Dan Greenburg, who poked fun with his pen, dies at 87

Four Things To Remember When Buying Oil Painting Reproductions

Download the Latest Version of GBWhatsApp APK (Official) - January 2024 (Updated)

Highlights of the Edinburgh Fringe 2023: Unforgettable Performances and Memorable Moments

Decoding Blazon_ The Language of Medieval Heraldry




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

sa gaming free credit
Attorneys
Truck Accident Attorneys
Accident Attorneys

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site Parroquia Natividad del Señor
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful