<h2>CHAPTER XXII<br/> <span class="small">PLANTS AND ANTS</span></h2>
<p class="hanging">Meaning of Plant Life—Captive and domesticated germs—Solomon's
observations denied by Buffon but confirmed by recent writers—Ants
as keepers and germinators of corn—Ant fields—Ants growing
mushrooms—Leaf-cutting ants—Plants which are guarded by insects—The
African bush—Ants boarded by Acacias and by Imbauba
trees—Ants kept in China and Italy—Cockchafer <i>v.</i> ant—Scale
insects—A fungus which catches worms.</p>
<p><span class="dropcap">T</span>HE world of plants supports all animal life, from the
mite to the elephant. There are most intricate relations
between one form of life and another. Thus a
Rose tree attacked by an aphis or green-fly may be succoured
by the slim ichneumon, or other thin-waisted fly, which
lays its egg in that of the aphis. Another insect, say a
spider, catches the ichneumon. A starling may eat the
spider, and be itself eaten by an owl.</p>
<p>So that ichneumon and starling are friends to the Rose,
whilst the other insect, the spider, and the owl are enemies.
Yet both the starling and the spider are probably, almost
certainly on the whole, friends of the Rose, although they
are unfriendly in this special case.</p>
<p>With all other similar series or changes the final term
is either a bird or animal of prey or mankind.</p>
<p>Until we introduce the idea of man as the culminating
point of the series, the whole of it seems to be without any
special meaning or advantage.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_282" id="Page_282">282</SPAN></span>
But when we think of how man utilizes the work of plants
and animals, then the whole scheme becomes intelligible and
complete; it is like a well-rounded story with a worthy and
adequate end.</p>
<p>Moreover, what man has done so far is only an instalment
of what he will probably succeed in doing. All who have
brought up caterpillars or bees know that their greatest
difficulty arises from certain minute insects or fungus
enemies. We already know enough about these latter to
fight them with some chance of success, but there are
hundreds of other spores and germs floating in the atmosphere,
and coming to rest on animals, on clothing, or on the
leaves or petals of plants. These germs are now just as wild
as, and infinitely more dangerous than the furious aurochs,
the disdainful wild asses, or the ferocious wolves that our
forefathers succeeded in domesticating.</p>
<p>Those bacteria, or germs, for instance, which are only
one-thousandth of a millimetre long, are only visible by the
help of a microscope. A row of three hundred thousand of
them would be required to make an inch in length! Yet
one of these germs can be mature and divide into two new
germs in twenty minutes. In forty minutes there would be
four, in an hour eight, and so on. The number after twenty-four
hours is almost incredible.</p>
<p>These little germs stick to our clothes, fingers, lips,
money, newspapers, and anything that is often handled.
They hover in the air we breathe, permeate the food we
eat, and inhabit water, and especially milk, in enormous
numbers. Some of them are deadly. One might easily
decimate a whole population, as indeed happened in the
South Sea Islands when smallpox was introduced. Others
are harmless and even necessary.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_283" id="Page_283">283</SPAN></span>
But to-day if you go into a bacteriological laboratory you
will find hundreds and thousands of little glass tubes all
neatly labelled and stoppered with cotton wool. If you
read those labels you will see that the bacteria of all sorts of
horrible and loathsome diseases have been captured and imprisoned.
There is the deadly anthrax bacillus peacefully
discolouring gelatine; in another, possibly the germs of
hydrophobia may be undergoing a process of taming or
treatment.</p>
<p>Each of these colonies of germs is under perfect control,
and in many of them their natural wickedness has been so
much alleviated that they are now useful aids to the doctor,
who gives his patient a mild dose of the disease in order to
accustom his system to resist accidental infection by the
original type.</p>
<p>Yet what has been done already is only an earnest of
what will no doubt be accomplished. Every farmer and
ploughboy will in time sow his own bacteria; every dairymaid
will make all sorts of cheese, from Camembert, Rochfort,
to Gorgonzola, by sowing the right kind of germ
upon it.</p>
<p>Man will no doubt cultivate the whole earth in the way
that he now cultivates Europe and Great Britain, and will
obtain mastery not only over his domesticated plants and
animals, but over fungi, bacteria, and insects also.</p>
<p>Even if man had never risen above the state of the
Banderlog of Mr. Kipling, there are other animals which
cultivate and even combine together for warfare and conquest.
In some respects they are better disciplined even
than man himself, and they can defy all sorts of mankind
except civilized man.</p>
<p>Possibly if man had not arisen on the scene, these insects
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_284" id="Page_284">284</SPAN></span>
might have developed some sort of civilization like that
imagined by Mr. Wells in his story of the moon. We are
only concerned with the relations of these ants to plants.
Those who are interested in their conquests and civilization
must consult the excellent account by Mr. Selous in his
<cite>Romance of the Insect World</cite>.</p>
<p>The most interesting points about them are as follows.
They gather a harvest and store it up for the winter. This
habit of the ant was well known to the ancients, and is
mentioned by Solomon. At the time of the French Encyclopædists,
when the fashion of the times was all for destruction
and disbelief, the fact that ants do so was ridiculed
and flatly contradicted, and especially by the great naturalist
Buffon. They pointed out that ants hibernated during
the cold weather, and therefore required no food for the
winter, so that Solomon's story was absolutely ridiculous.</p>
<p>For nearly a hundred years people forgot that Palestine
and those other countries where the habits of ants had been
reverently observed possessed a climate much too warm and
mild to make the ants hibernate.</p>
<p>After careful study it has been discovered that the ants
thoroughly understand the first stages of brewing!</p>
<p>The corn which they gather is not eaten by them in its
hard winter condition. When taken into the winter nest of
the ants this corn would very soon germinate and grow into
a plant, but the ants manage to prevent this by some
method which is not yet understood. If such a nest is left
alone by the ants, the corn immediately begins to grow, but
it is not allowed to do so till it is required for food. Should
the store of corn get damp by heavy rain, or mould appear
upon it, then the careful ants bring up their store into the
sunlight and dry it there.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_285" id="Page_285">285</SPAN></span>
When it is required for food germination is permitted,
but is soon stopped: the ants nibble off the growing rootlet
of the seed. Then when the grain absorbs water and begins
to change its starch into sugar, the ants suck in the sugar
and reap the reward of all this labour and skill.</p>
<p>In the conduct of this germination of the grain they are,
of course, far in advance of all the savage races of mankind.</p>
<p>There are certain South American species which go at
least one step farther. They have their own fields—spaces
three or four feet in diameter—which are entirely occupied
by one single grass, the so-called Ant-rice (<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Aristida stricta</i>).
Dr. Lincecum states that the ants "work" these plantations
very carefully, removing every weed or other plant that
comes up, and sowing every year the new seed at the proper
season.<SPAN name="FNanchor_130" id="FNanchor_130" href="#Footnote_130" class="fnanchor">[130]</SPAN></p>
<p>These facts are sufficiently strange and startling, but there
are even, apparently, species still more intelligent, who not
only sow and reap, but actually prepare a soil and reap
a crop of mushrooms, or at least, if not of mushrooms, of
fungi. These wonderful little insects gather leaves and cut
them into fragments of an appropriate size; they are then
collected together so as to form a bed, and the fungus is
introduced to this. The fungus is kept at a certain stage of
growth by very careful treatment; the fruit-bearing ends
are nibbled off, so that the young shoots come up indefinitely.
The ants feed upon these fungus shoots, and get a crop indefinitely
prolonged.</p>
<p>This is, of course, a system of agriculture far beyond that
employed by any tribe of savages. Only man in a relatively
advanced stage of agriculture grows mushrooms for himself.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_286" id="Page_286">286</SPAN></span>
These facts, startling as they may seem, are apparently quite
well authenticated and have not been seriously questioned.</p>
<p>There are a great number of leaf-cutting ants who are,
indeed, amongst the most dangerous of the many insect pests
in South America and elsewhere. Wallace (<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Revue Scientifique</i>,
179, p. 29), in speaking of the Saauba or leaf-cutters,
describes how he placed a large heavy branch across the route
of one of their columns.</p>
<p>The long line of laden ants was checked, and the greatest
confusion set in at the head of the column. Each ant, for
several feet down the column, then laid down its leaf, and all
set to work to tunnel under the obstacle. This was managed
in about half an hour's time, and the column then proceeded
on its way.</p>
<p>Amongst other interesting and curious facts connected
with these extraordinary insects is that some kinds are
actually kept up by certain plants as a sort of standing army
or police.</p>
<p>There are no less than 3030 species of plant which keep
these standing armies of ferocious ants, or if they do not
keep them, at any rate lay themselves out to attract them.
The kinds which are attracted live upon sugar, and are
strong, active, and extremely good fighters. When travelling
through the bush in Africa, it is not unusual in some places
to touch inadvertently one of these protected trees. In a
moment one's hand and arm are covered by ants whose heads
are dug deep down into the skin, biting with all their strength.</p>
<p>It is of course impossible to describe all the plants which
protect themselves against injurious insects and even large
animals in this way, but two of them must be mentioned.</p>
<p>There are certain Acacias which are particularly interesting.
Like most of this order, they have large hollow
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_287" id="Page_287">287</SPAN></span>
spines instead of stipules at the base of the leaf. It is inside
these spines that the troops of the police-insects live.
These Acacias (Oxhorn Acacia, as well as <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">A. sphærocephala</i>
and <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">A. spadicigera</i>) also produce <em>sugar</em>, which is secreted by
peculiar gland-like organs on the stalks of the leaves, and
even <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">albuminoids</i>, for at the tips of the leaflets there are
peculiar little bodies which contain albuminous matter.</p>
<p>The Imbauba tree (<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Cecropia spp.</i>) also possesses a
standing army of these ants. It puts them up in the hollow
pith in the centre of the tree, which is divided into large
roomy spaces and makes a convenient nest. There is a
minute opening by which they run in and out. On one
occasion a naturalist found that the ants had been benumbed
by a period of very cold weather, and in consequence had
neglected their duty, and the trees had been stripped of their
leaves by leaf-cutting kinds.<SPAN name="FNanchor_131" id="FNanchor_131" href="#Footnote_131" class="fnanchor">[131]</SPAN></p>
<p>These last mentioned, the leaf-cutting ants, are especially
dreaded by owners of plantations. Foreign or introduced
plants are not specially guarded against their ravages by
special secretions, as is the case with the native flora, so that
the coffee and cocoa plantations are often severely injured.
In some places man has copied those Acacias and
Imbaubas, for in the orange plantations of the province of
Canton, in China, ants' nests are collected and placed on the
trees. Moreover, the different trees are connected together
by bamboos, so that the ants can easily pass, as on a bridge,
from one tree to another.</p>
<p>Near Mantua, in Italy, the same system seems to be adopted,
and ants' nests are carefully placed near the fruit trees.
Their use can be quite well understood, for Forel, in his
work on the Ants of Switzerland, estimates that <em>one ants'</em>
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_288" id="Page_288">288</SPAN></span>
<em>nest will require</em> a supply of 100,000 insects a day during the
season.</p>
<p>It is quite common to find ants crawling about on the outside
of the large heads of the Garden Centaury and a few
other Composites. If one looks carefully, one finds that
there are streaks of honey to be seen coming from the scales.
The honey is not produced in the flowers, and seems at first
sight to be of no use at all so far as the plant is concerned,
but that is very far from being the case. Here comes a cockchafer
or other destructive beetle, intent on absolutely
devouring and destroying the young flowers. At once the
pugnacity and wrath of the ants are aroused. They take
up a menacing and ferocious attitude, and the cockchafer
passes to some other plant.<SPAN name="FNanchor_132" id="FNanchor_132" href="#Footnote_132" class="fnanchor">[132]</SPAN></p>
<p>Such honey-glands found on the leaves and not connected
in any way with the flowers, are more common than one
would think. Even the common Bracken produces curious
honey-secreting hairs when it is in a young condition.
These attract ants which drive away caterpillars and other
dangerous insect foes.</p>
<p>Many very dangerous insects are too small for birds, and
can only be dealt with effectually by insects or fungi. Of
these perhaps the most dangerous are the "scale" insects.
The best-known one is very like a minute mussel shell. It is
about one-quarter to one-third of an inch long, and can be
sometimes found in quantities on apples; they are generally
collected round the stalk. The mother insect has this scaly
back, and lies down and dies on the top of her eggs, so that
her scaly corpse forms a roof and a shield for her young
ones. Like all pests of this sort, these creatures increase
very rapidly.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_289" id="Page_289">289</SPAN></span>
A certain scale insect was doing an immense amount of
harm in the orange plantations of Fiji, but it was destroyed
by the introduction of lady-birds, and of a certain parasitic
fly. It is said that these insects destroyed the "scale" in six
months!</p>
<p>Experiments have also been tried with fungi. There are
certain fungi which attack the bodies of living insects. So
far, however, it cannot be said that the results have been at
all satisfactory, for the propagation and infection of the
living insects by fungus spores is not at all easy. There is
also a certain feeling of doubt as to what may happen.
Those fungi, and particularly bacteria, might set up dangerous
epidemics.</p>
<p>Decaying meal contains hundreds of certain very curious
worms called <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Nematodes</i>. They are short, about one-twenty-fifth
of an inch in length, and are smooth and
very like minute eels. These creatures are very active,
wriggling or swaying to and fro in a characteristic manner.
Now in decaying meal there is a peculiar fungus. Like
most fungi, it consists of very minute transparent threads
which contain living matter or protoplasm. This particular
fungus has branches, but also forms curious loops
or belts. When one of these eel-worms is swaying about in
the meal, it may quite well happen that its tail slips into one
of these loops. If that happens, the fate of the worm is
sealed, for the loop is elastic, and the more it wriggles the
farther it slips in and the stronger it is held. The fungus
then begins to grow, and forms a tube which grows <em>into the
worm</em> and kills it. All the material in the worm's body goes
to nourish the fungus. This extraordinary fungus has been
described and figured by Professor Zopf, but seems to be a
very unusual and rare form.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_290" id="Page_290">290</SPAN></span></p>
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