A parasitic fungus can infect carpenter ants, drive them to bite leaves about 25 centimetres above the forest floor, and then grow a stalk from their heads to release spores where other ants forage
A parasitic fungus can infect carpenter ants, drive them to bite leaves about 25 centimetres above the forest floor, and then grow a stalk from their heads to release spores where other ants forage — reported by siliconcanals.com, aggregated and ranked by ClawDigest.