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Made in gb
[DCM]
Et In Arcadia Ego





Canterbury

... life continues to turn into a 70s B movie :

http://arstechnica.com/science/2016/09/bizarre-ant-colony-discovered-in-an-abandoned-polish-nuclear-weapons-bunker/



For the past several years, a group of researchers has been observing a seemingly impossible wood ant colony living in an abandoned nuclear weapons bunker in Templewo, Poland, near the German border. Completely isolated from the outside world, these members of the species Formica polyctena have created an ant society unlike anything we've seen before.

The Soviets built the bunker during the Cold War to store nuclear weapons, sinking it below ground and planting trees on top as camouflage. Eventually a massive colony of wood ants took up residence in the soil over the bunker. There was just one problem: the ants built their nest directly over a vertical ventilation pipe. When the metal covering on the pipe finally rusted away, it left a dangerous, open hole. Every year when the nest expands, thousands of worker ants fall down the pipe and cannot climb back out. The survivors have nevertheless carried on for years underground, building a nest from soil and maintaining it in typical wood ant fashion. Except, of course, that this situation is far from normal.

Polish Academy of Sciences zoologist Wojciech Czechowski and his colleagues discovered the nest after a group of other zoologists found that bats were living in the bunker. Though it was technically not legal to go inside, the bat researchers figured out a way to squeeze into the small, confined space and observe the animals inside. Czechowski's team followed suit when they heard that the place was swarming with ants. What they found, over two seasons of observation, was a group of almost a million worker ants whose lives are so strange that they hesitate to call them a "colony" in the observations they just published in The Journal of Hymenoptera. Because conditions in the bunker are so harsh, constantly cold, and mostly barren, the ants seem to live in a state of near-starvation. They produce no queens, no males, and no offspring. The massive group tending the nest is entirely composed of non-reproductive female workers, supplemented every year by a new rain of unfortunate ants falling down the ventilation shaft.
Like most ant species, wood ants are tidy animals who remove waste from their colony. In the case of the bunker ants, most of this waste is composed of dead bodies. The researchers speculate that mortality in the "colony" is likely much higher than under normal circumstances. "Flat parts of the earthen mound [of the nest] and the floor of the adjacent spaces ... were carpeted with bodies of dead ants," write Czechowski and colleagues. This "ant cemetery" was a few centimeters thick in places, and "one cubic decimeter sample contained [roughly] 8,000 corpses," which led the researchers to suggest that there were likely 2 million dead ants piled around the nest mound. The sheer numbers of dead bodies suggest that this orphaned wood ant nest has been active for many years.

The ant graveyard is also host to a tiny ecosystem, where mites and a few other invertebrates feed on the bodies of the dead wood ants. The question is, what are the wood ants eating? It's possible they have figured out how to eat the creatures who feast in their cemeteries, essentially making them cannibals at one remove. But Czechowski and his team dismiss this as unlikely. It's also possible that there are nutrients growing in the bat guano from the ants' only living neighbors in the bunker. But in their years of observation, the scientists still haven't figured out for certain what the ants' source of food is.

Wood ants are known for surviving in harsh conditions, and they have been found on remote islands as well as living in small, closed boxes. And it's not impossible that this underworld colony could bloom into something more. In a previous experiment, Czechowski showed that orphaned wood ant colonies will adopt queens from related species. So if a queen ant fell down the pipe, she might join this colony and start reproducing. Unfortunately, however, without a steady food supply the ants probably wouldn't have enough energy to raise a new generation and keep the nest warm for them. So the only way this nest carries on is by waiting for a new rain of ants from the free colony above ground.

The paper's conclusion reads like a dystopian science fiction scene from the 1970s:

The wood-ant ‘colony’ described here – although superficially looking like a functioning colony with workers teeming on the surface of the mound – is rather an example of survival of a large amount of workers trapped within a hostile environment in total darkness, with constantly low temperatures and no ample supply of food. The continued survival of the ‘colony’ through the years is dependent on new workers falling in through the ventilation pipe. The supplement of workers more than compensates for the mortality rate of workers such that through the years the bunker workforce has grown to the level of big, mature natural colonies.
Life in an abandoned nuclear weapons bunker is nightmarish, even for the humble ant. It appears that the legacy of the Soviet occupation of Poland doesn't just haunt the country's human population. It has affected the social structures of insects too.





.. when metaphors get real eh ?

http://jhr.pensoft.net/articles.php?id=9096&display_type=element&element_type=4&element_id=43&element_name=


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Made in gb
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avoiding the lorax on Crion

That's Interesting.

Ants. Are they even cannibals.
Very interesting to watch and see how it develops

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Made in gb
[DCM]
Et In Arcadia Ego





Canterbury

http://m.imdb.com/title/tt0070531/


just sayin'

The poor man really has a stake in the country. The rich man hasn't; he can go away to New Guinea in a yacht. The poor have sometimes objected to being governed badly; the rich have always objected to being governed at all
We love our superheroes because they refuse to give up on us. We can analyze them out of existence, kill them, ban them, mock them, and still they return, patiently reminding us of who we are and what we wish we could be.
"the play's the thing wherein I'll catch the conscience of the king,
 
   
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Brum

 reds8n wrote:
http://m.imdb.com/title/tt0070531/


just sayin'


http://m.imdb.com/title/tt0047573/
was what I was thinking of

I'm a bit disappointed that the local radiation isn't actually anything to do with this. Inside the sarcophagus at Chernobyl there is a thriving community of fungi that actually use radiation as their primary energy source.

My PLog

Curently: DZC

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Interesting, but...

 Silent Puffin? wrote:
Inside the sarcophagus at Chernobyl there is a thriving community of fungi that actually use radiation as their primary energy source.
...where can I read about this?

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Brum

 NinthMusketeer wrote:
where can I read about this?


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radiotrophic_fungus

http://www.nature.com/news/2007/070521/full/news070521-5.html


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-

Michael Caine saved Houston from killer bees in Swarm!

Might he have to save Warsaw from giant, mutated ants?

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deaths and the sun will be swept from the sky. But is it true?" - Tom Kirby, CEO, Games Workshop Ltd 
   
Made in gb
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avoiding the lorax on Crion

That's a odd but interesting fungus...

Kinda strange but kinda cool too.

Sgt. Vanden - OOC Hey, that was your doing. I didn't choose to fly in the "Dongerprise'.

"May the odds be ever in your favour"

Hybrid Son Of Oxayotl wrote:
I have no clue how Dakka's moderation work. I expect it involves throwing a lot of d100 and looking at many random tables.

FudgeDumper - It could be that you are just so uncomfortable with the idea of your chapters primarch having his way with a docile tyranid spore cyst, that you must deny they have any feelings at all.  
   
Made in gb
Battlefortress Driver with Krusha Wheel





Brum

 jhe90 wrote:
That's a odd but interesting fungus...

Kinda strange but kinda cool too.


Its a shame that radiotrophic fungi aren't better studied, despite being quite cool not much is known about them, even exactly how and why they use radiation is basically educated guesswork. It seems to quite common as well; most radioactive particles in the environment, well in woodland but its probably universal, can be found inside fungi.

Fungi can survive in space, well their spores can at least.

Fungal spores were placed on the outside of the ISS and viable spores were harvested after 18 months in hard vacuum, that's far better than Water bears

My PLog

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Set phasers to malkie! 
   
Made in gb
Keeper of the Holy Orb of Antioch





avoiding the lorax on Crion

 Silent Puffin? wrote:
 jhe90 wrote:
That's a odd but interesting fungus...

Kinda strange but kinda cool too.


Its a shame that radiotrophic fungi aren't better studied, despite being quite cool not much is known about them, even exactly how and why they use radiation is basically educated guesswork. It seems to quite common as well; most radioactive particles in the environment, well in woodland but its probably universal, can be found inside fungi.

Fungi can survive in space, well their spores can at least.

Fungal spores were placed on the outside of the ISS and viable spores were harvested after 18 months in hard vacuum, that's far better than Water bears


Forget cockroach's.
Fungi will survive anything including a asteroid...

That's interesting. Despite the obvious dangers involved in the study.

Sgt. Vanden - OOC Hey, that was your doing. I didn't choose to fly in the "Dongerprise'.

"May the odds be ever in your favour"

Hybrid Son Of Oxayotl wrote:
I have no clue how Dakka's moderation work. I expect it involves throwing a lot of d100 and looking at many random tables.

FudgeDumper - It could be that you are just so uncomfortable with the idea of your chapters primarch having his way with a docile tyranid spore cyst, that you must deny they have any feelings at all.  
   
Made in us
Longtime Dakkanaut




On a surly Warboar, leading the Waaagh!

 Silent Puffin? wrote:
 jhe90 wrote:
That's a odd but interesting fungus...

Kinda strange but kinda cool too.


Its a shame that radiotrophic fungi aren't better studied, despite being quite cool not much is known about them, even exactly how and why they use radiation is basically educated guesswork. It seems to quite common as well; most radioactive particles in the environment, well in woodland but its probably universal, can be found inside fungi.

Fungi can survive in space, well their spores can at least.

Fungal spores were placed on the outside of the ISS and viable spores were harvested after 18 months in hard vacuum, that's far better than Water bears



Fungal spores in space, you say? And so the Waaagh begins!

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2016/09/03 17:26:32


 
   
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North Carolina



IT HAS BEGUN....




Proud Purveyor Of The Unconventional In 40k 
   
Made in gb
Longtime Dakkanaut





That's actually really funny. I suppose an ant's weight is so negligible, they could easily fall a few hundred meters without injury, and it would be over so quickly, they wouldn't know what happened... Just carry on as usual.
   
Made in gb
Highlord with a Blackstone Fortress






Adrift within the vortex of my imagination.

What makes me smile is the idea of a colony of worker ants, with no queen, living in a Soviet bunker;
and to top it off this particular species of ant is red.


n'oublie jamais - It appears I now have to highlight this again.

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Gargantuan Gargant





New Bedford, MA USA

It was an interesting read.

Essentially, they've all fallen into a death trap, but they keep on working, because they don't know what else to do.

What's most impressive is that the nest on top can support that many losses.

   
Made in us
Heroic Senior Officer





Western Kentucky

Don't know who else read the actual report, because the report is even more insane and has tons of pictures. The floor in some places is BLACK, solely from dead ants piled so high the corpses must be in the hundreds of thousands.

Also, the ants try to escape in the summer, but can never make it to the exit apparently. They make it most of the way up before it gets too cold.

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Fallout Fire Ants here we come


 
   
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This is like if the Tyranids were being run by the Imperium.

It still amazes me that sometimes real life comes up with situations more horrifying than fiction.

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Thanks for the links! Very interesting indeed.

Road to Renown! It's like classic Path to Glory, but repaired, remastered, expanded! https://www.dakkadakka.com/dakkaforum/posts/list/778170.page

I chose an avatar I feel best represents the quality of my post history.

I try to view Warhammer as more of a toolbox with examples than fully complete games. 
   
Made in us
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MN (Currently in WY)

Wow, switch Ants to Humans and you have the latest YA sci-fi book.

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