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Worlds Most Bizarre Trap-Jaw Ants Daceton | Animals EXPLAINED

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Ants are crazy. They are capable of constructing the most complex structures besides out own and have been breaking down dead things, farming fungus and bugs, and rampaging through forests since the Cretaceous period. They split off from the wasps and diversified into tens of thousands of species of extremely bizarre forms. The soldier caste of many ants are the ones with the big guns – huge heads with massive muscles to power their hatchet-like jaws. However, there are some species whose soldier caste take the jaw mechanism to the extreme. One such jaw-some expert has a heart-shaped head, huge powerful jaws, three pairs of spines, and moves ploddingly through the canopies of the Amazon. This gal right here is the Arboreal Trapjaw Ant – one of only two species within the genus Daceton. __________________________________________________________________ Art in Thumbnail belongs to - __________________________________________________________________ ✅Tyler Addison ✅ ✅Adam Midzuk ✅ __________________________________________________________________ ✅ PATREON ✅ ✅ STICKERS & SHIRTS ✅ ✅Facebook: ✅Twitter: ✅Instagram: @edgeonthetrail ✅ MUSIC ✅ “EDGE Theme” - Taung Child / Reuben Cozens “Great Bear: - Maiia ”Toy Dog” - Eye Liner “Venetian Blinds” - Eye Line __________________________________________________________________ If I've used something on my video that you don't want me to use, PLEASE EMAIL ME first before flagging a video, I'm very reasonable and will take the video down to replace whatever image or video belongs to you. Email: expeditiondiscoveryguild@ __________________________________________________________________ RESEARCH Azorsa, Frank; Sosa-Calvo, Jeffrey (2008), “Description of a remarkable new species of ant in the genus Daceton Perty (Formicidae: Dacetini) from South America.“ (PDF), Zootaxa, 1749: 27–38, doi: Dejean, A.; Delabie, J. H. C.; Corbara, B.; Azémar, F. D.; Groc, S.; Orivel, J. R. M.; Leponce, M. (2012), Hughes, William (ed.), “The Ecology and Feeding Habits of the Arboreal Trap-Jawed Ant Daceton armigerum“, PLOS ONE, 7 (5): 1–8, doi:, PMC 3380855, PMID 22737205 __________________________________________________________________ Hashtags - __________________________________________________________________

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