The Herald (South Africa)

Ants nurse wounded – study

- Mariette le Roux and Laurence Coustal

AFRICAN Matabele ants dress the wounds of comrades injured during hunting raids and nurse them back to health, according to an astonishin­g discovery reported yesterday.

After collecting their wounded from the battlefiel­d and carrying them back home, nestmates become medics, massing around patients for intense licking of open wounds, according to a study in the journal Proceeding­s of the Royal Society B.

This behaviour reduced the fatality rate from about 80% of injured soldiers to 10%, researcher­s observed.

The study claimed to be the first to show such nursing behaviour in any non-human animal.

“This is not conducted through self-medication, as is known in many animals, but rather through treatment by nestmates which, through intense licking of the wound, are likely able to prevent an infection,” study co-author Erik Frank said. He contribute­d to the research when he was at the Julius Maximilian University of Wuerzburg in Germany, and continues his work at the University of Lausanne in Switzerlan­d.

Frank had also taken part in a previous study, published last year, describing the ants’ battlegrou­nd rescue behaviour.

The new research focused on what happens to the injured back in the nest.

Matabeles, one of the world’s largest ant species, are fierce warriors and attack even humans with their ferocious bite.

They hunt termites bigger than themselves, attacking their feeding sites in column formations of 200-600 individual­s.This hunting method causes many ants to get hurt, often having their legs bitten off by termite soldiers.

In the aftermath of fighting, while some of the ants return home with their dead termite prey, others scuttle looking for injured colleagues.

Rescuers use their strong jaws to pick up the wounded and drag them back to the nest for treatment.

 ?? Picture: AFP/ ERIK FRANK/ ROYAL SOCIETY ?? FIELD MEDICS: Megaponera ants investigat­e the injuries of another ant
Picture: AFP/ ERIK FRANK/ ROYAL SOCIETY FIELD MEDICS: Megaponera ants investigat­e the injuries of another ant

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