Ants' Ancient Farming Roots Traced Back to Asteroid Impact 66 Million Years Ago

October 4, 2024
Ants' Ancient Farming Roots Traced Back to Asteroid Impact 66 Million Years Ago
  • A recent study from Smithsonian scientists explores the origins of the close partnership between ants and fungi, revealing that ant colonies began farming fungi approximately 66 million years ago, coinciding with a mass extinction event caused by an asteroid impact.

  • This asteroid strike created favorable conditions for fungi to thrive, leading to an evolutionary partnership between ants and fungi that continues today.

  • The study emphasizes the resilience of ecosystems, highlighting how ants and fungi adapted and thrived after one of Earth's most catastrophic events.

  • The period following the impact saw a rise in fungal spores, providing ants with resources to farm, indicating that ant agriculture likely originated during this ecological crisis.

  • The genetic material gathered from the study will aid further research into the behavior of agricultural ants and the adaptations of the fungi they farm.

  • Today, four groups of ants cultivate four types of fungus, often altering their growth to provide specific nutrients, showcasing the complexity of their agricultural practices.

  • Entomologist Ted Schultz, the study's lead author, emphasizes that ants have practiced agriculture for longer than humans have existed, suggesting we could learn from their success.

  • These fungi produce gongylidia, a food source that sustains complex colonies of leafcutter ants, which can number in the millions.

  • Researchers built an evolutionary tree using genetic data from fungi and ants, tracing their co-evolution back to the time of the asteroid impact.

  • The research involved contributions from multiple institutions and was supported by various scientific organizations and foundations.

  • Published in the journal Science, the study analyzed genetic data from 475 species of fungi and 276 species of ants to construct detailed evolutionary trees.

  • Historically, it was believed that fungal farming by ants had a single origin, but advancements in genome sequencing have allowed for deeper insights into this co-evolution.

Summary based on 9 sources


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