Daily Maverick

Investigat­ing why there are more ants in your pants of late

Ants have limited options to survive the extremely hot conditions that marked this past summer. One of their options – moving into homes for shelter and food – explains the recent infestatio­ns

- By Onke Ngcuka Onke Ngcuka is a Daily Maverick journalist.

Ants are among the longest-living insects, but they could be threatened as extreme heat sweeps across the globe because of the deepening climate crisis. During this past summer, several heatwaves in parts of Gauteng caused an influx of ants into homes as the insects left their nests for cooler conditions.

Dr Tom Bishop, a lecturer at the School of Bioscience­s at Cardiff University in Wales, told Daily Maverick: “The main defence that ants have against extreme temperatur­es is not to be active. When it gets too hot, ants stay inside their nests and the colony is usually buffered from this heat as they are buried in the soil.

“However, the foraging ants would not want to go outside their nest because of the heat. Their only way of getting food becomes cut off and they can only forage at dawn, dusk or cooler parts [of the day]. That’s the impact we see: the gradual starving of the colony.”

Research shows that extreme cold and heat cause the metabolism, developmen­t and performanc­e of ants to decline to near zero. It also shows that ants do at times move their nests to cooler terrains to shield their eggs and young from delayed developmen­t caused by extreme temperatur­es.

Heatwaves often cause their influx into households from gardens as they seek cooler spaces to forage and take shelter. However, in the long term, ants – like many other species – will either migrate or adapt, Bishop said.

“Adaption can take on another form besides migrating; they can tolerate the conditions where they realise they cannot forage as much any more and have to get by with foraging less. Or it could be adapting over a long period of time – years, decades, centuries. This is clearly too long a period in the context of the changes happening to our planet.

“Sometimes, in certain species, it appears that adaptation can happen pretty quickly. But on the whole, that option is kind of off the table. Adapting

by tolerating the conditions is realistic, but adapting rapidly geneticall­y is not an option. “The final option would be for insects not to adapt and just die. It can be challengin­g to determine which of those options species will take – either moving or dying,” Bishop said.

“With ants, they’re poor dispersers from an ecological point of view as they’d have to move to a new landscape or country and that can be difficult as they’re not like larger mammals with greater migration patterns… We can drive or fly to another country, but for ants, it’s going to take years and years.” There are about 15,000 species of ants across the globe and 600-odd species in South Africa. Their

collective raw biomass outweighs that of humans. They play a pivotal role in the ecosystem.

“If you take ants out of the picture because they’ve been killed by heatwaves, then there becomes a lack of food for other creatures,” Bishop said. “Given their central position in ecosystems, lots of other insects might grow exponentia­lly and that may cause other problems.

“Ants are scavengers and they’re constantly cleaning the ecosystem, dispersing seeds and turning over soil, which has an impact on soil activity. We know ecosystem disruption will happen.”

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Photo: istock
Extreme heat and cold are negatively affecting ants’ metabolism, developmen­t and performanc­e. Photo: istock
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