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They Milk the Aphids

From deep inside her complex nest
She rules her colony
And sees that all the others there
Her orders they obey.

Hundreds of her daughters there live.
Her strict rules they all fear.
Their fathers now all of them dead.
Only females live here.

Each one has well defined duties
And daily they must work,
Cleaning and fettling this huge nest.
But beware those who shirk.

A long evolved social structure
And all know where they stand,
To keep the colony as one
Accepting queen’s command.

Those daughters can’t attract the males   
For she made each sterile
So that they have no distractions
And to queen stay servile.

Wingless, they cannot fly away
But may crawl from the nest
To milk honeydew from aphids.
Taste fresh juice at its best.

Each springtime the queen will grow wings
To fly and find the males
And so becomes fertile again,
Producing more females. 
 
The queen ant lives for some decades.
Every spring, eggs she lays.
Each daughter worn out within months       
And males last but two days.

Copyright © | Year Posted 2023




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Date: 7/3/2023 12:52:00 PM
Never thought to see a poem, a well written and entertaining poem, about aphid milking ants. The informative piece reminded me of an old National Geographic story I saw on TV about, you guessed it, aphid milking ants. John
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Hargreaves Avatar
Tony Hargreaves
Date: 7/4/2023 8:08:00 AM
Many thanks John. With a hundred million years of evolution these insects seem to have found a stable social structure and know all the tricks. Their 'all female' communes are curious. Somewhat worrying for the males who get a raw deal. Best wishes. Tony.

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