How Ants Make Our Cities Healthier
Ғылым және технология
In pavement cracks, roadside medians, and parking lots, there are incredible miniature civilizations booming within our concrete jungles: ants! We don’t often think of urban areas as having “ecologies” but Amy Savage, Ph.D. studies the amazing diversity of ants making their way in the city. Their combined efforts make our urban landscapes greener places to live, but their newfound love of carbs is also changing things for them...
Our host and museum curator, Jessica Ware, Ph.D. joins Amy in a search for some tiny neighbors. They're managing surprisingly well in New York and other cities by adapting to human food. But without the access to easy protein (e.g., other insects to prey on), they're doing things a bit differently in street medians than they would in a more rural setting.
#ants #cities #nyc #ecology #insects
Image: Julian F, CC BY-NC, iNaturalist
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Пікірлер: 206
Pavement Ants when humans invent cities: Eff yeah! About time.
@victoriaeads6126
21 күн бұрын
I would guess they were rock ants before that. Fancy upgrade? 😂
@donkeykong758
21 күн бұрын
😂😂😂
@aviel4218
20 күн бұрын
Most animals when humans invented cities: Oh no... Cockroaches, crows, raccoons, rats, mice, flies, mosquitoes, pigeons, ants, geckos, and some species of spiders when humans invented cities: Oh yesssss😍😍😍😍😍😍😍.
@rafa.frqnz1188
20 күн бұрын
@@aviel4218 DIDNT EUROPEANS BRING THE PESTS ,RATS, ROACHES, AND PIGEONS ETC TO AMERICAS ?
@ZombieSlav
19 күн бұрын
Colony looking at the first settlement, being like: Look! They've finally learned... Well that was quick (laughter in Antish)
I'm actively training my 2.5 million ants.
@sizanogreen9900
20 күн бұрын
gotta get ahead of the curve, eh?
@apocalypse487
20 күн бұрын
Easy there Brain. World domination isn't that easy.
@OmniicoreAutomation
19 күн бұрын
Game on, I challenge you my 2.5 million ants
@kennetheyancey
19 күн бұрын
I had the very same thought.
@epacig
19 күн бұрын
That’s just a rough estimate, and that’s distributed evenly…out here in the wild/real world it’s finders keepers, and I’m up to several billion in ants It’s free real estate out here!
Urban ecology is so cool. More please!
@christianweibrecht6555
21 күн бұрын
Raccoons have undergone interesting adaptations in cities
@carstarsarstenstesenn
20 күн бұрын
@@christianweibrecht6555coyotes too
@ripHalo0002
15 күн бұрын
Agreed, its super important to rekindle people's love of animals. We spend most of our times in cities than an "in nature" so we should embrace the nature that lives with us.
@trenomas1
9 күн бұрын
I think we're all yearning for this kind of connection.
PBS is such a net positive for the world. Thank you for everything y’all do 💜💜💜
A couple of years ago we watched one of those ant wars between two nests in front of our house. They are _intense_ 😲
@christianweibrecht6555
21 күн бұрын
Ants: waging war where millions fight & die since ever
We got ants in our home, and my wife was freaking out. But I told her ants are probably the best pest you can have out of any pest. Glad this video confirms it!
@puffpuffpass3214
21 күн бұрын
You might change you mind when you wake up with fire ants in your bed like I did years ago lmao
@mabru9816
21 күн бұрын
Ants and Spiders. Unless they're carpenter ants, then maybe not so bueno for the integrity of your home...
@LGrian
21 күн бұрын
@@mabru9816they only eat wood if it is already rotting. If carpenter ants show up, you have a moisture problem.
@uggali
21 күн бұрын
Usually just a reminder to do better at storing food
@mabru9816
21 күн бұрын
@@LGrian Ooh that's good to know!
I remember as a kid in Texas not realizing that I was standing on a fire ant mound...I paid a lot more attention to where I was standing after that...
@LupeCoded
5 күн бұрын
As Texas guy myself who had that same misfortune in my youth, I got the same lesson from that experience also. *Tips hat
@microbuilder
5 күн бұрын
@@LupeCoded Were they the little ones, or the big ones? I'm not sure which was worse, but was unfortunate enough to experience both...good times! lol
Ants are amazing for sure.
In my backyard there are at least 6 species of ants. Leaf cutters, black crazy ants, fire ants, Cardiocondyla sp., Pseudomyrmex pallidus and Brachymyrmex obscurior so far. I'm still gatheing more information but yay ants!
@nobody.of.importance
20 күн бұрын
Ants are cool and all, but dead serious: Fuck fire ants.
@TerpleDerp2600
19 күн бұрын
Are you in Texas?
@nobody.of.importance
19 күн бұрын
@@TerpleDerp2600 Guessing this was aimed at OP but just in case it was meant for me: No, I'm in Oregon.
@TerpleDerp2600
19 күн бұрын
@@nobody.of.importance it was aimed at OP, yes. I am surprised you have such a strong distaste for fire ants living in Oregon. Visited SE USA?
@nobody.of.importance
18 күн бұрын
@@TerpleDerp2600 Nah, but I have some friends in Texas who've told me some pretty awful stories about accidentally falling onto fire ant mounds while out playing as kids. Seen a few outcomes of such events, too. Noooo thank you!
I have been distracted by city ants for decades. they are the ultimate gleaners. leave anything where they can get to it? it'll be gone, sometimes (I should say, usually), within 24 hours.
Love ants, currently studying 3 species in the lab I'm in for PhD work! My favorite are our Atta Cephalotes, the (best) Leaf Cutters!
@TerpleDerp2600
19 күн бұрын
I read something really interesting about how some Atta cephalotes workers will lay infertile eggs to feed the queen. Have you seen this at all during your research? Also, what is your PhD on? I’m hoping to get a career in biology, studying nature and ants in particular.
Ants so damn interesting
To bad we dont have more green spaces. Hell hyways and freeways off ramps with there dirt sides fill em with native plants and trees flowers. Just get a seed cannon and seeds that wont fit aka bigger then 2 or 3 mm just throw some seeds out before the use of the seed cannon. Why well it will clean the airvand ground but most importantly it will reduce air ground and noise pollution.
You know it!!!!
@DrizzyB
19 күн бұрын
We love ants!!
@lolzi100
6 күн бұрын
I knew you'd be in the comments! It's ant love for everyone! 🐜🐜🐜
I would pay to see _Honey, I Shrunk the Curator_ as a summer adventure movie!
I have honeypot ants. It’s a new hive so it’s still small, but I have a couple pots hanging around now. Ants are great.
@Appletank8
20 күн бұрын
I have a preverse curiosity about what those honeypots taste like
@Ilix42
20 күн бұрын
@@Appletank8 You can color them by dying their food, so maybe they can taste like anything. :D
@tungsten2009
2 күн бұрын
@@Ilix42 like.....honey? mmm.... you have to tell us for science.
I thought that this would be interesting, but I sure am impressed with how much relevant information you managed to share with us ! Thanks for all the work everyone involved in bringing this video to us, well done !
Great topic! Excellent production-quality! Keep it up, PBS.
Maybe huge insect populations should be used at dumps to eat organics?
@RealBradMiller
21 күн бұрын
They likely move in on their own, once the compaction of the machines stops in areas.
@nobody.of.importance
20 күн бұрын
As RealBradMiller said, they already kinda do! I've even read papers on some invertebrates in dumps developing the ability to consume and digest plastic and other unsavory waste products we dump into the environment. Superworms are one example of that, if you're curious and wanna check it out.
@ZombieSlav
19 күн бұрын
Its a great concept called bioremediation, and its something that could solve a lot of problems, sadly its very difficult to implement since waste is not sorted/categorized correctly, often not sorted at all, which means it most often contains substances that inhibit - kill or otherwise limit the species from reaching target substances. Simply put for example if there is a 100kg of waste, 10kg being food scraps, that means species that is meant to eat off the food scraps needs to navigate through other 90kg as well to reach target, and in reality it gets worse, those 90kg often contain poisonous substances as well... And as more waste comes, the target (10kg) eventually becomes inaccessible. Making bioremediation slow and less effective... But the bright side is, people can improve that greatly, we just need to regulate our activity better, call me an optimist but I think we are getting there, hopefully soon.
@salam-peace5519
18 күн бұрын
@@ZombieSlav In Germany waste is actually separated for better recycling, everyone has three or four different trash cans given by the communal waste service and is encouraged to separate accordingly. Usually one for paper and cardboard (to recycle into new paper/cardboard), one for plastic packaging (to melt into new plastic), one for organic (usually used for biogas plants that produce energy, or as fertilizer), and one for everything else, which is usually burned in combustion power plants. Glass and plastic bottles are also disposed and recycled separately. For electronic devices and batteries there are also separate disposal places.
That vision of walking through a city like a forest!
Great topic and great speakers, thank you for making this! I wish the video was a bit more in-depth, I'd totally watch like 40 minutes of this ^^
2:34 That ant leaf train looks so wonderful.
Nature continues to care for us even when we don't return the favor.
I still don’t understand why Americans use landfills. Here in Vienna we have a giant facility that burns the non-recyclable trash, filters and cleans the smoke and uses the heat to provide warm water to 350 000 households. A similar system could be used to produce lots of energy for the city of New York while also taking care of the massive waste problem. The ants would maybe miss out on a few meals, but the city and planet would still profit a lot.
I've kept pavement ant colonies by finding newly mated queens after their nuptial flights and setting them up in terrariums with topsoil.
I’ve always been fascinated by these alert little hunters. They seem to be thinking, to be look back at you. I admire them and I’m glad they’re not big enough to threaten us.
Anybody else have Archer shouting in their mind?
@hozkahilgarri3936
21 күн бұрын
Archer's mom, actually, but yeah :)
@nobody.of.importance
20 күн бұрын
THAT'S HOW YOU GET ANTS!
I LOVE this series!!!
luckily for the US Prenolepis Imparis...winter ants are one of the few native species that are absolutely beating the crap out of the invasive argentine ants and even going head to head with fire ant colonies.
"Remember those ants that can eat 60,000 hot dogs a year?" Me: Joey Chestnut!
Great work. Thank you very much. Great writing. Great acting,
this makes me wonder if ants can get metabolic syndrome from our junk food 😅😅😅
@xaviervasquez4657
19 күн бұрын
They dont directly eat our food they feed it to a fungus that they will later eat
You guys should link all your PBS channels to help support one another!
I did my master thesis on leaf cutter ants. Fascinating creatures
One night, I was at a truck stop gas station off a highway in a mostly desert area. I noticed hundreds of ants all around the sidewalk. The bright lights of the gas station attracted bugs, the bugs would beat themselves against the lights until exhausted, then drop to the ground. The ants scurried around, picking up the battered bugs and taking them back to their mound. It was fascinating to watch the symbiotic relationship the ants had built. Normally daytime ants became nocturnal to take advantage of the free food supply. And because they came out at night, they were less likely to get stepped on or bothered by humans. I enjoy discovering ant colonies - unless it's when I accidentally stand on their mound while working outside. Those buggers can bite!
One of those rare videos absolutely everyone should watch^
Thank you for sharing this elegant view with us! 💚
Ant pattern has been good for me when fishing, probably due to their widespread distribution. Other insects don't seem to be doing so good. I haven't seen a salmon fly in like 5 years.
So cute. Appreciate you little guys! 🙏🫡
I saw Jessica on Star Talk and she is so passionate when she speaks about her work it’s commendable
great episode
Amazing Ants are always Awesome. Except for the one eating off my plate during a picnic ❤
This is a highly enjoyable and eye opening episode
Loved this ❤
Thank you 🙏
Ants are... pretty much everywhere! Wow thanks, I'd be learning so much if I was 3.
I have tetramorium immigrans. They're so cool to watch
Having befriended the red, black, and fire ant queens using their favourite mushroom sandwiches, I think it's safe to say ants are my friends.
My Aunt has always worked to benefit the city
Jess Ware was amazing on Neil deGrasse Tyson's podcast / YT channel.
@vsznry
21 күн бұрын
Do ants eat the caskets in graveyards? lol
Living in the country I appreciate ants n what they do
We're never going to get to a point where we can cohabitate with other species as long as cities are even hostile to all of us. The majority of the land area in a city is dedicated to roads and parking for cars which are inhospitable environments for all life, including humans. Just healthy soil, alone, is capable of sequestering a lot of carbon, so if we tore up all the roads and replaced some of it with rails along main thoroughfares so that the most amount of open ground was available for biological matter other than humans, it'd go a long way toward carbon sequestration, habitat preservation, and beautifying cities. Of course we should leave the pavement for ease of human transportation and accessibility, but getting rid of the cars would make such a huge difference toward making cities more natural environments.
@nobody.of.importance
20 күн бұрын
I think you think there's a lot more roadway in the world than there actually is. Making concrete is awful for the planet, but tearing up existing concrete would have a minor effect at best.
@MrCmon113
5 күн бұрын
I don't know how people can write shit like that and never second guess themselves. The entire point of all of civilization is to not be in a natural environment. A city isn't just there for you to look at. People actually want to get to places. A road is immensely "hospitable" to humans, humans built them, so other humans could go where they want to go. Your totalitarian plan misses, among other things, that not all people are abled bodied young adults with nowhere to be in nice climates and for whom emergencies never happen.
watching this as I’m sitting in urgent care because i got bit by a red ant and my whole foot has swelled
Ant souls-like in urban open world with rare golden crickets that upgrade your health when?
@TerpleDerp2600
19 күн бұрын
Not exactly the same, but Empire of the Ants is a game where you play as an ant and do… something. I don’t know what yet. The game is scheduled for release this year. There’s also Empires of the Undergrowth, which is a colony management RTS game, not really the same as what you’re saying but it is ant related. I have like 150 hours on the game, it’s pretty good. It’s coming out of early access this year, after 7(?) years of early access!
great video
Now I have the urge to watch "Empire of the Ants".
besides ants are wasps cockroaches and silverfishes also beneficial urban scavenging insects?
I love insects so much!
Large numbers of ant colonies evolving to become more voracious predators could, in the future, become an ecological problem as they can threaten other insect species that also play key ecological roles 🤔
Brilli-ant
Think of the ants! Litter!
I love ants, great video :)
02:07 so you're telling me there are ants on Arctic/Antarctica?
But are there ants in ANTarctica???
@ZombieSlav
19 күн бұрын
Pff how do you think it got the name? :D
@TerpleDerp2600
19 күн бұрын
There are not. Antarctica and Greenland do not have any ants, and the same goes for a few really obscure isolated islands across the world.
Maybe people need to stop labelling every creature that live around human settlements as "pests" and just accept that these animals live there too. Just prevent them from getting inside houses, but if ants live in gardens and parks, what is the problem? Same with rats and mice, of course you should prevent them from entering your house but if they live in gardens or parks, let them live instead of considering their mere existence a problem. People need to start seeing urban animals as part of our cityscapes and get more of a "coexist" view on them instead of a "we need to get rid of them" view.
60,000 hot dogs or 600,000 potato chips? There is no way in hell 10 potato chips weigh as much as a hot dog.
When humans whipe themselves out ants will take over and be the next dominant species
Omg finally people thinking about bugs!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Cool stuff! I knew they played a part but I still do not like them in my house!!!!!
We need more ants.
Hjp leaf cutters 😂 If you know, you know. But seriously, love the dozens of different ant species who invade my home.
We know how to eat in Chicago. Sorry ants, no deep dish pizza for you.
I ♥ANTS !!!!!!!!!
How is Formicidae pronounced as “for-mih-si-dee”?
@nobody.of.importance
20 күн бұрын
Pretty close. The "-dae" party is usually pronounced like "day", but no reasonable person would get up in arms about that.
Until you have shared your house with Argentine ants, no offense, you don't know how close they are to just eating all of Northern California. The Bay Area is infested with superants!
@kkattrap
20 күн бұрын
Yep, 24 species in the medians of Broadway? If the Argentinian supercolony gets in there it'll be over.
@TerpleDerp2600
19 күн бұрын
SoCal has fire ants now too
@trevorholm6470
18 күн бұрын
Infested with humans
My Aunts approve of this message.
I am so sorry for unleashing Raid spray on all of you in the past.
I feed them crumbs
As long as we survive we are the environment. I'd like less move aside but we'll just have to live and see what happens.
❤
Loool the ants are rejecting our standard American diet
audio needs work
@thexanderthemander
19 күн бұрын
The hosts voice sounds like she's trying too hard and is talking to 5 year olds.
Ok, now do abot 5 ant families of NY.
This video has been brought to you by the National Ant Council 🐜
The home of ants! ❤
Let’s not talk about damages ants cause such as structural and electrical as well as food contamination
what do you call someone who has an ant phobia?
@nobody.of.importance
20 күн бұрын
Myrmecophobia, pronounced "mer-meh-cuh-pho-bee-uh".
@DAYBROK3
20 күн бұрын
@@nobody.of.importance thank you. i have suffered with this for as long as i can remember, spiders great, other insects ok, but ants ewwwwwwww. its taken me decades to be anywhere near them.
@nobody.of.importance
19 күн бұрын
@@DAYBROK3 Eh, it's reasonable, especially if you've had to deal with fire ants. I live nowhere near their territory and I'm terrified of those little bastards x) Impressive you got through the video tho! Trying to do some self-mediated exposure therapy?
@DAYBROK3
19 күн бұрын
@@nobody.of.importance many years of work
Not Fireants!
🐜🐜🐜🐜 bravo
4:30 How desperate for sitting space do you need to be to sit in the median between 2 car sewers.
Fire ants 😢
Clone the beneficial ants, retool the environment
Ants are at least better than cockroaches and rodents.
🐜
Who the F mixed this audio?
Ants don't need to solve climate change. They'll adapt, and inherit.
Ants will inherit the Earth
Alien Ant Farm.
Ants o.0
@pluto9000
21 күн бұрын
🐜🐜🐜🐜
@nobody.of.importance
20 күн бұрын
Ants 0u0
Love 💕💕💕