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On Tue, 25 Feb 2025 10:59:29 +0100, Kyonshi <gmkeros@gmail.com> wrote:On 2/25/2025 12:00 AM, candycanearter07 wrote:>Ant <ant@zimage.comANT> wrote at 02:27 this Sunday (GMT):>I don't have a brain. :P>sure you do :Dbrain of someone called Abby Normal or something like that>
>
https://wildlifeinformer.com/do-ants-have-brains/
"Ants do have brains, but these nerve clusters are much
tinier than human brains. A humans brain has over 100
billion cells, but ant brains only have around 250,000
neurons. Although ant brains are small, they have large
brains for insects.
>
This allows ants to communicate with each other and process
information. The exact size of an ants brain can vary based
on its species. The smaller an ant is, the smaller its brain
is likely to be. Some species, like leaf ants, have much
larger brains than other ants.
>
...
>
An ants antennae function as a part of its brain. Ants
store information in their antennae and use their antennae
to sense chemicals that have been left behind by other ants.
When an ants antennae are covered, it may not be able to
recognize the other ants in its colony."
>
>
Of course, that information is about Formicidae in general. Our
particular six-legged friend may be some sort of mutant, or maybe has
suffered a recent decapitation. We should never make assumptions,
after all. ;-)
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