Here is a PDF of "A guide to the Ants of Jambi (Sumatra, Indonesia)" By Rizky Nazarreta, Damayanti Buchori, Yoshiaki Hashimoto, Purnama Hidayat, Stefan Scheu and Jochen Drescherwhich is full of photos of the ants.
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One more "look at this ant"
I promise you will not regret.
Cataulacus latissimus. This is similar to the turtle ants of North America, but look at this tiny creature. Made to be flat. The flat body may help this ant if she falls off of her tree, she can sail back to the trunk and find her colony again. (this is a guess based on ants with similar size and morphology)
@futurebird
Oh, is she ever neat! She looks soft, too.I wonder, does her head and midsection look like a beetle on purpose? Like, is that a useful camouflage?
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One more "look at this ant"
I promise you will not regret.
Cataulacus latissimus. This is similar to the turtle ants of North America, but look at this tiny creature. Made to be flat. The flat body may help this ant if she falls off of her tree, she can sail back to the trunk and find her colony again. (this is a guess based on ants with similar size and morphology)
@futurebird The ruffly edges make her body seem more like a dress than anatomy. Quite a stunning color and look.
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One more "look at this ant"
I promise you will not regret.
Cataulacus latissimus. This is similar to the turtle ants of North America, but look at this tiny creature. Made to be flat. The flat body may help this ant if she falls off of her tree, she can sail back to the trunk and find her colony again. (this is a guess based on ants with similar size and morphology)
@futurebird That is a *really* neat ant
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One more "look at this ant"
I promise you will not regret.
Cataulacus latissimus. This is similar to the turtle ants of North America, but look at this tiny creature. Made to be flat. The flat body may help this ant if she falls off of her tree, she can sail back to the trunk and find her colony again. (this is a guess based on ants with similar size and morphology)
@futurebird what the heck!?
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@futurebird what the heck!?
Like flying squirrels but ants.
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@futurebird what the heck!?
@heybenji @futurebird
I have no regrets. -
One more "look at this ant"
I promise you will not regret.
Cataulacus latissimus. This is similar to the turtle ants of North America, but look at this tiny creature. Made to be flat. The flat body may help this ant if she falls off of her tree, she can sail back to the trunk and find her colony again. (this is a guess based on ants with similar size and morphology)
She didn't skip lat day OR leg day... or head day?
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One more "look at this ant"
I promise you will not regret.
Cataulacus latissimus. This is similar to the turtle ants of North America, but look at this tiny creature. Made to be flat. The flat body may help this ant if she falls off of her tree, she can sail back to the trunk and find her colony again. (this is a guess based on ants with similar size and morphology)
@futurebird some kind of flant
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One more "look at this ant"
I promise you will not regret.
Cataulacus latissimus. This is similar to the turtle ants of North America, but look at this tiny creature. Made to be flat. The flat body may help this ant if she falls off of her tree, she can sail back to the trunk and find her colony again. (this is a guess based on ants with similar size and morphology)
@futurebird flant!
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She didn't skip lat day OR leg day... or head day?
@futurebird she saw a picture of a garden spade and said "goals"
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One more "look at this ant"
I promise you will not regret.
Cataulacus latissimus. This is similar to the turtle ants of North America, but look at this tiny creature. Made to be flat. The flat body may help this ant if she falls off of her tree, she can sail back to the trunk and find her colony again. (this is a guess based on ants with similar size and morphology)
@futurebird
Look at this ant! -
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