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Black Garden Ant – Lasius niger

All adult Hymenoptera have a very narrow waist in the middle of
their body, and this is clearly seen in the wingless worker caste
of ants. Ants live in large colonies and are well-known insects
in Britain’s countryside and gardens. There are over three
dozen species of ants in the UK but one of the commonest and most
often seen is the Black Garden Ant (Lasius niger), although related
and very similar species of black ant are also found.
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What do they look like?
The Black Garden Ant workers are 4-6 mm long, wingless and black
or dark brown. They are usually found in large numbers, either
around their nests in the soil or following each other along
their scent trails across the ground and paved areas, over walls
and into buildings. The queen is larger (up to 15 mm long) and
mid-brown in colour but is only seen if the nest is excavated.
The fertile males and females are only seen briefly, as swarms
of flying ants. |
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Where do they live?
Black Garden Ants nest mainly in dry soil and humus. Although
their nests are most often noticed in gardens – in flower
beds, lawns, and under paving stones – they are also common
in dry grasslands and heaths. From their nests, they forage
widely for food along scent-marked trails across soil and ground
vegetation, and – most noticeably – across paved
surfaces and into houses, where they are attracted to sugar
and crumbs. Outside human habitation, they feed on many things:
small live insects, dead insects, nectar, seeds, etc. They also
feed on the sugary secretions produced by aphids, some other
sap-feeding insects and certain caterpillars, and often tend
them to protect the source of this food from predators. |
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Where can they be found?
This ant is found throughout the British Isles. |
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When can you see them?
Worker ants can be seen foraging on the ground and in houses
from March to October. The winged adults fly on certain afternoons
from July to September: this is triggered by warm humid weather
conditions and often occurs simultaneously over wide areas of
the country. |
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Life cycle
The fertile flying ants mate during their two or three hour
flight, but many of them are eaten by birds. After the mating
flight, the males die but the surviving mated females shed their
wings and make individual chambers in suitable nest sites in
the soil. The new queen lays a few eggs and rears the larvae
to adults: these adults are her first workers and the successive
broods of workers that start to emerge in the early spring will
tend the queen, rear the larvae, protect the pupal cocoons (the
familiar cream-coloured so-called ‘ants eggs’),
and forage for food for the queen and colony for the remainder
of the queen’s life (up to 15 years). During early summer,
the queen lays special eggs that will develop not into the usual
sterile workers but into fertile winged males and females. Later
in the summer, these fertile adults undertake the mating flight
and the successful females will establish new colonies. |
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What do they do?
This species and a related Lasius species are essential for
the conservation of the declining populations of the attractive
Silver-Studded Blue Butterfly (Plebejus argus) on heathland
because they protect the butterfly’s caterpillars from
predators in return for feeding on secretions specially produced
by the caterpillars.
Although black ants are a nuisance in houses and can cause problems
for gardeners by loosening the soil under plants, they are harmless
and do not carry diseases. |
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Did you know…?
All the worker ants of a particular colony have developed as
sterile females from eggs laid by the colony’s single
queen, so they are all sisters! |
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