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Fictional World Building: The Planet of the Ants


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#1 Offline futurebird - Posted May 29 2023 - 4:58 AM

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Notes for a possible fiction story ...

 

Traditional ant names are based on one ant virtue as the first name and one ant “intimidating quality” as the last name.

 

For example:

  • Temperance the Absconder
  • Proportionally the Relentless
  • Synchronicity the Amputator
  • Alacrity the Calculating
  • Efficiency the Eternal Witness

-----

Snapshot, The Subway:

 

The ants piled in to the subway car. Each had a newspaper. (by looking carefully at the header you could tell which colony they were from) Committed to business-like conduct & social order each ant had her paper folded into a strip, so she could read one column at a time without getting the paper in the faces of other passengers. Holding a sturdy leather strap with one tarsal claw, the paper with another & checking her pocket watch with a third, ants were the picture of urban sophistication.

 

I did feel a little out of place on the train full of ants. Their antennae neatly folded like the colony newspapers, they made excellent use of the space. No jostling, no arguments. Just a silence filled with pheromone conversations that I could not hear. A tall and elegant bull ant worker with bright dark eyes offered me her seat... as if being a human were a kind of infirmity. I took up her offer. I really needed to sit down.

---

 

Character idea:

 

A scholar who is a book louse larvae— he is deeply torn between completing his research by reading the books and eating them so that he can pupate (and maybe then, at last have the nerve to ask out the moth on whom he has a terrible unrequited, totally secret crush) Sometimes he eats books he finds poorly written out of spite.

 

“I had to miss a week of work sick in bed after eating Art of the Deal, but it seemed like a matter of personal duty to munch up that one. Worse I don’t think it helped my silk glands develop at all! Really I felt worse after the ordeal—had to nibble on a 1st edition of Nother’s tables just to get my bearings— and now all of the logarithms between 0.5 and 0.7 are missing.” He said with a little sob. “Whatever am I to do? I simply love my books far too much!” FaevHZz.jpg Timothy! No! That's a first edition! And where are your spectacles! What has gotten in to you?

 

-----

Character idea:

 

The provost is a very capable administrator but sometimes— well sometimes she has been known to sting people.

 

That morning I found an unwelcome guest in my office. The university provost, a lean an elegant bull ant with angry dark eyes. Her natural expression was so menacing it was hard to tell if she was ever pleased. Judging by her twice folded front legs and twitching right antennae —a good mood seemed even less likely.

 

“We need to talk about the new head librarian.” she said with formic acidity underlining each word.

“What? Timothy? but he’s so knowledgeable. He knows exactly where everything is in our collection!”

“Not hard when half of it ends up in your belly.” said the provost massaging her antennae ridges as if she were developing a headache.

“You must admit, large collections can benefit from culling— we can’t just stockpile every single useless book and paper.” I said hoping that Timothy had not eaten something too valuable this time. eBjaQvZ.png ---

 

 

Character idea: Maculinea arion, a lovely blue butterfly and her murderous roommate the jewel wasp.

 

Timothy, book louse, is desperately in love with her, but little does he know that his love interest has a treacherous past, she grew up eating baby ants! She lives with her roommate, a femme fatal jewel wasp who is connected to the disappearance of several gentleman roaches. Only because the ants fail to take crime against roaches seriously has the jewel wasp not been caught.

 

 

When Timothy discovers what the woman he loves has done he is torn about exposing her.  When Timothy starts looking in to her and her roommate-- he suddenly disappears! Our human exchange professor (and narrator) goes searching for Timothy fearing he has become a victim of the jewel wasp, a beautiful but horrible serial killer who paralyzes her victims then buries them alive as food for her young.

 

Z27gQeY.png

 

When she is finally captured the jewel wasp laughs at the police with contempt:

"You can't call me a murderer! None of my victims are even dead yet! And you'll never find them anyway. You should focus on that wicked blue butterfly, not me, I rid the world of PESTS!"

 

---

 

Snapshot: The Provost's Secretary

 

When I arrived at the provost's office I didn't know what manner of criticism I was to receive. Even in my nervous state I couldn't help but notice a peculiar rustling commotion under the long dress of her secretary, a near-sighted gray wolf spider who seemed just as flustered as I was. I craned for a better look, and saw a little spiderling peek from the ample hems of her skirts. This, it seemed, was too much for the secretary. She gave up all pretense of checking me in.

 

"Please oh please don't tell the provost I brought my children here!" begged the secretary. Of course I assured her I wouldn't say a word. But, after my meeting I did something that may have betrayed the confidence of the nervous mother. The provost followed me from her office, still giving instructions and criticisms of my work, and this was when I spotted a spiderling snuggled on the provost's gaster! Something in my demeanor betrayed my mirth at the situation.

 

The provost whirled around fixing her large and perpetually angry black eyes on her own bottom. Seeing the spiderling there she flew into a rage. Mandibles waggling at her secretary! She backed the poor spider into a corner. Then shouted

"If you bring them again you might as well look for another job!" and slammed her office door. I felt horrible. This was all my fault. I would be responsible for a mother of... um... a mother of many being out of work with no way to support her young.

 

So, of course I offered to babysit. To my surprise the spider was happy to trust me with such an important task and this is how she came to arrive at my apartment to drop the little ones off. She had packed them all into a large basket.

"They should stay in the basket. You don't need to do anything. Just don't leave them alone." Confident that I was helping I sat down at my desk to work on my research. After some time I felt something small and fuzzy nestling in to my leg.

 

It was one of the spiderlings of course. The basket simply didn't provide the comfort of mother. I attempted to move the little one back, but when I got close to the basket several more made their way on to my arms and chest. They looked up at me, each with 8 little black eyes. "mum?" they asked. Who was I to denny them?

 

Soon I was covered head to toe ... and though I tried to resume my paperwork, it could not be done. I stood in the middle of the room covered in spiders. I don't know how much time passed or how I didn't become over whelmed, but suddenly after a time they all poured off my body rushing to the door.

 

Thankfully it was their mother, and it was clear I was just a substitute since they made their way back to her rump with all haste. I had a few unsettling dreams, but I also resolved to talk to the provost about her intolerant attitude to children. I suppose ants can just leave their little ones at home, they have sisters who are nurse maids!

 

---

About The Biology:

 

The insects of the plant are people-sized, highly intelligent, with a diverse urban culture that brings many species of ant, and inquiline together. Our narrator is a human exchange professor at one of the finest ant universities in the biggest city on the planet. Of course, insects on earth have rarely grown to be such sizes. From what I understand there are two main constraints:

 

1. Exoskeletons present difficulties at larger scales.

2. Insects do not generally have active lungs, so getting O2 to all parts of the body presents problems as surface area decreases relative to mass in larger bodies.

 

The ants on the planet of the ants are very similar to earth ants, but this is convergent evolution at an extreme-- distant paths to a similar pattern rather than a familial relation. The exoskeletons of the ants are simply much stronger than the chitin of earth insects, due to a mutation that unleashed huge insects on their planet long ago-- and resulting in a very different evolutionary history. I would love to have some sources or speculation about just how the chemistry and structure of chitin might be altered to make this possible-- Also, these insects have something like lungs. Are there other biological considerations for huge insects? Could there be constraints on vertebrates on this planet that don't exist on earth? (A reason why all of the animals with backbones are tiny... maybe there's no calcium except deep in the ocean?

 

I really need to learn more about how mineral composition interacts with biology.) I've considered a lower gravity... but, don't like this much as it over-complicates human visitors. Their planet is like ours but on their planet the insects came out on top.

 

According to the ants, every planet they have visited has contained some life that is similar to ants: because ants are perfect. This isn't true for humans, many planets don't have anything like vertebrates at all. The ants suppose that being ant-like is a pre-requisite to having space travel and advanced civilization. But, a discovery in their desert on their home planet could throw all of this into question!

---

More Notes on Ant Culture:

Until recently male ants had no role in society, but recent medical treatments have extended their once feeble life-spans allowing them to take on more responsibility in ant cultures and societies.  Worker ants are generally uninterested in lives of reproductives, though there is a certain romance attached to old tales of young queens and drones, naive and winge'd looking for a place in the world. Such imagery is important in ant artwork. "The winged couple seeking a new home" 
 

There was a bit of a problem with homeless drones wandering around cities, but ants have low tolerance for social disorder or needless suffering and they established a system of dormitories. In the following photo some girls are dragging their little brothers out of the nest for nuptial flight day. But, this is very primitive, and "flying days" are now just general holidays: it's considered barbaric to force young queens and drones to all go fly at once. The modern way in the civilized Ant Planet is to give them time to grow up and find their own way.

N7j70xH.jpg

 

On the Planet of the Ants, army ants are seen as primitive and taboo-- in particular their practice of making bivouacs has been outlawed-- it's complex,  since raiding is objectively violent and not really compatible with a modern technological civilization-- but, only extremist traditionalist army ants still want to have raids-- (and their disgust with the factory aphid farms has a point) Arguably, simply choosing to form a bivouac ought to be legal and it's unfair that it is criminalized.

 

The university where our human narrator is an exchange professor from earth suddenly goes into lock down when a column of army ants advance. Everyone is terrified and our narrator gets caught up in the fear-- only to discover that these ants have been coming to a particular great tree to form a bivouac for centuries -- and they don't "kill and eat everyone they meet" -- having been on the bad side of ant-centric thinking our narrator starts to question what is being taught about the army ants.

She is even invited to enter their bivouac, a living building where the ants who form the walls and floors gently move you through the rooms and passageways. It is an experience that fills our narrator with awe!
 

She also learns from the army ants about the vast factory farms that feed the great cities-- and thinking on the food production on earth wonders if she's in a position to really judge-- though she accepts that it's probably wise to be unsettled by such things as some of the army ants she meets suggest.


Edited by futurebird, May 29 2023 - 5:52 AM.

Starting this July I'm posting videos of my ants every week on youTube.

I like to make relaxing videos that capture the joy of watching ants.

If that sounds like your kind of thing... follow me >here<


#2 Offline futurebird - Posted May 29 2023 - 7:51 AM

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The Provost Remembers her First Time Meeting a Human

When I was but a callow youth, my integument not yet hardened to the ways of the world, my colony sent me to live with our satellite sisters deep in the verdant countryside. That I might gain the exercise and good sunlight that helps a young ant to mature with grace and good character. I remember many fond hours deep in the woods collecting little vertebrates. Mice and voles, bark deer and even the vicious little rock bears. For a city child it was an education in nature.

 

I was in awe of the complexity in creatures so small. Creatures with but feeble cartilage skeletons tucked within their soft and often furry bodies.

When the Humans first contacted us, I resisted what the scientists were claiming: that these strange soft creatures of unnatural size were somehow the same as the little creeping things of our forests! How could a mammal... a monkey at that grow to such horrific size? It was like some old horror show premise.

I never found little monkeys in our temperate forests near the city- such a vertebrate was a tropical and exotic creature. But, when the professor from Earth first arrived ... I could see the resemblance. She has only four limbs, much less hair than you'd expect. I wanted very badly to squeeze one of her arms to see if they were really soft.

"Welcome to Central City College" I said. Her whole face contorted like a grub weaving its pupae. I reminded myself this gummy motion was how they smiled.


Edited by futurebird, May 29 2023 - 10:49 AM.

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If that sounds like your kind of thing... follow me >here<


#3 Offline Jonathan5608 - Posted May 29 2023 - 6:28 PM

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I think it’s really hard to immerse an audience in a serious way with insects. Even with animals. A serious story with animals also seems hard to pull off. I think of Richard Adams Watership Down. He not only told a good story but also incorporated a lot of a rabbits biology. Even fantasized it with his own language. I guess it all depends on the kind of story your gonna right.

Edited by Jonathan5608, May 29 2023 - 6:36 PM.


#4 Offline Flu1d - Posted May 30 2023 - 9:36 AM

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I think it’s really hard to immerse an audience in a serious way with insects. Even with animals. A serious story with animals also seems hard to pull off. I think of Richard Adams Watership Down. He not only told a good story but also incorporated a lot of a rabbits biology. Even fantasized it with his own language. I guess it all depends on the kind of story your gonna right.


One of the most famous fantasy series of all time is called "Redwall", and it involves mice.

I would read a fantasy/sci-fi type of ant series all day any day.. although I will say, I think I would love that kind of story in a graphic novel type format as well.

(Not discrediting your comment, however I just wanted to add in there that I think it might not be a bad idea personally)


I have been flirting with the idea of writing fantasy/sci-fi/horror books for quite some time now, I just haven't had the motivation. I think something involving ants is a cool idea.
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#5 Offline Ernteameise - Posted May 30 2023 - 11:15 AM

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Have you ever read "The Ants" trilogy by Bernard Werber?

He is a French sci-fi writer and he wrote this thriller about ants and the possible first contact (as in ALIEN first contact) of humans and ants. The ants in the novels (European Formica wood ants) are characters in their own right and they are part of a sophisticated civilization and a human scientist is trying to get in contact with them.

It is pretty amazing, taking a lot of the biology into account (the ant names are actually short bits of the chemical signals).

 

All in all great ideas you have there.

I have always been fascinated by fantasy / sci-fi (especially thrillers) that incorporate science and animals.


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#6 Offline Jonathan5608 - Posted May 30 2023 - 3:16 PM

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I think it’s really hard to immerse an audience in a serious way with insects. Even with animals. A serious story with animals also seems hard to pull off. I think of Richard Adams Watership Down. He not only told a good story but also incorporated a lot of a rabbits biology. Even fantasized it with his own language. I guess it all depends on the kind of story your gonna right.

One of the most famous fantasy series of all time is called "Redwall", and it involves mice.

I would read a fantasy/sci-fi type of ant series all day any day.. although I will say, I think I would love that kind of story in a graphic novel type format as well.

(Not discrediting your comment, however I just wanted to add in there that I think it might not be a bad idea personally)


I have been flirting with the idea of writing fantasy/sci-fi/horror books for quite some time now, I just haven't had the motivation. I think something involving ants is a cool idea.
I love redwall, it got a bit repetitive so I stopped two books from the end. I just think that books like Watership down is a good model to make a really immersive tale.

#7 Offline AntPerson76 - Posted May 30 2023 - 4:11 PM

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Have you ever read "The Ants" trilogy by Bernard Werber?

He is a French sci-fi writer and he wrote this thriller about ants and the possible first contact (as in ALIEN first contact) of humans and ants. The ants in the novels (European Formica wood ants) are characters in their own right and they are part of a sophisticated civilization and a human scientist is trying to get in contact with them.

It is pretty amazing, taking a lot of the biology into account (the ant names are actually short bits of the chemical signals).

 

All in all great ideas you have there.

I have always been fascinated by fantasy / sci-fi (especially thrillers) that incorporate science and animals.

I never heard of this, but I'll check it out, it sounds cool. I myself am actually getting into writing. I've been writing short stories for years actually, (never published any) but that's mostly because I stop halfway through and never revisit it again. I'm committed on a book right now, which one of my friends parents can possibly publish, but a sci/fi ant book of my own totally sounds like something I would enjoy writing.


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#8 Offline Jonathan5608 - Posted May 30 2023 - 4:23 PM

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Have you ever read "The Ants" trilogy by Bernard Werber?
He is a French sci-fi writer and he wrote this thriller about ants and the possible first contact (as in ALIEN first contact) of humans and ants. The ants in the novels (European Formica wood ants) are characters in their own right and they are part of a sophisticated civilization and a human scientist is trying to get in contact with them.
It is pretty amazing, taking a lot of the biology into account (the ant names are actually short bits of the chemical signals).

All in all great ideas you have there.
I have always been fascinated by fantasy / sci-fi (especially thrillers) that incorporate science and animals.

I never heard of this, but I'll check it out, it sounds cool. I myself am actually getting into writing. I've been writing short stories for years actually, (never published any) but that's mostly because I stop halfway through and never revisit it again. I'm committed on a book right now, which one of my friends parents can possibly publish, but a sci/fi ant book of my own totally sounds like something I would enjoy writing.
I wish you well. Writing is super fun
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#9 Offline futurebird - Posted May 31 2023 - 6:34 PM

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Have you ever read "The Ants" trilogy by Bernard Werber?

He is a French sci-fi writer and he wrote this thriller about ants and the possible first contact (as in ALIEN first contact) of humans and ants. The ants in the novels (European Formica wood ants) are characters in their own right and they are part of a sophisticated civilization and a human scientist is trying to get in contact with them.

It is pretty amazing, taking a lot of the biology into account (the ant names are actually short bits of the chemical signals).

 

All in all great ideas you have there.

I have always been fascinated by fantasy / sci-fi (especially thrillers) that incorporate science and animals.

I never heard of this, but I'll check it out, it sounds cool. I myself am actually getting into writing. I've been writing short stories for years actually, (never published any) but that's mostly because I stop halfway through and never revisit it again. I'm committed on a book right now, which one of my friends parents can possibly publish, but a sci/fi ant book of my own totally sounds like something I would enjoy writing.

 


If you want someone to share it with for feedback let me know. I used to be a script reader in another life. But I do fiction too. Probably better at reading than at writing. 

At the moment I'm far too busy to write seriously, but I still enjoy creating scenes and characters and building out this little world I have in mind. 


  • AntPerson76 likes this

Starting this July I'm posting videos of my ants every week on youTube.

I like to make relaxing videos that capture the joy of watching ants.

If that sounds like your kind of thing... follow me >here<


#10 Offline futurebird - Posted June 17 2023 - 7:05 PM

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I've been building out the world more and written a couple of provisional chapters. I've starting working on some new characters. 


THE MAYOR
Central City is a progressive place, the ants would not think it necessary that their mayor be a very large or impressive ant. (and being large is associated with being good at laying eggs as much as solidering.) Hence, the mayor was a cone ant, and a minor at that. (Though, no one can really tell the difference between cone ant majors and minors: they're all tiny.)

The provost hadn't prepared me for just how tiny the mayor would be.

Suddenly everyone started clapping, but the podium still seemed empty. Looking more closely, I could see that the mayor was standing *on* the podium, which had been fashioned in Bull Ant proportions. She was about the size of soccer ball. Her exoskeleton was translucent and golden, catching the studio lights held up by the television reporters. Her antennae were unusually long and a little floppy. She wore a green felt vest, four boots polished to a high shine and a little yellow top hat.

 

---

NATURAL HISTORY OF MYRMECOS

"Peopling" is such a funny word.

 

I'm currently writing about the "anting" of the great landmasses of Myrmecos some 180,000 years ago. There are many species of "ant people" but they share 6 common ancestors ... and the first to leave the tropical region called Tato and spread over Myrmecos were the many Bull Ants with their large eyes and long mandibles. Then some 120k years ago the ancestors of Carpenter Ants, with their talent for earthworks and carving spread over Myrmecos. In wave after wave the planet was populated colonies of by several 100 varied species of ant.

Part of the fun in this story is imagining what the many different species of ants would do if they had more technology, language, complex culture. So, to that end, they are all analogs of real earth species of ants.

 

The early years of ant civilization were full of wars and conflict. Ants have been often said to love few things more than war, and it is this period in their history that gave them this reputation: The Age of War. But, the modern space-faring ant colonies of Central City are proud of the peace and cooperation they have built despite this history. Indeed they are in some ways ashamed of that period in their past, while still managing to be a little smug when talking to humans "So, you are the only species of people on your planet? What happened to the Neanderthals and the others?"

Obviously, it's kind of hard to imagine Homo sapiens sapiens living with all the other lineages of Homo sapiens (eg. homo sapiens neanderthalensis, Homo sapiens denisovan etc.) We can hardly put up with each other as it is! So, how do the ants do it? How do they accommodate the differences in biology, size, culture, diet and thinking? Every ant has a colony. (unless something has gone very wrong) Ants do not need to struggle to define and enforce the boundaries of cultural identities-- this makes them more adept at cross species alliances.

 

The ants had one other massive advantage when it came to ending The Age of War and building a tolerant, if not harmonious society: all pheromone languages are largely mutually intelligible. Ants from far flung colonies, with very different biology can generally communicate with each other at least at the pheromone level.

 

But, this peace and cooperation were still hard-won. During The Age of War an entire genus of ants: The Driver Ants, were so different in the ways they lived and made war that the other species of ants worked together to reduce their numbers to extinction. This is seen as an embarrassing, moment in ant history. Genocide is always ugly. The ants of Central City sometimes succumb to attempts to rationalize the crime... "The Driver ants weren't like us, they are all blind you see, they had a very different language-- and they simply never built anything permanent. They were nomads living in structures made of their own bodies." But, justifying a genocide only makes it even more evil. The more enlightened city ants, simply avoid talking about the Drivers at all--

But, here is the thing: The Driver ants aren't really extinct.

 

It's a very Lost World situation.

 

What I'm struggling with is that it feels unrealistic that the city ants would not know this. Myrmecos has one huge city, surrounded by satellite cities, industry and farms. Ant colonies of every known intelligent species live in this great city. Ants don't really bother with "nations" -- and with the exception of the Drivers they have all always spoken the same pheromone language. But, how could an advanced people be taken by surprise by the sudden re-emergence of an entire other species of person on their own planet? It's like if bigfoot were real on earth... What are some cultural features of the ants, or structural features of the planet that could make this plausible?


Starting this July I'm posting videos of my ants every week on youTube.

I like to make relaxing videos that capture the joy of watching ants.

If that sounds like your kind of thing... follow me >here<


#11 Offline futurebird - Posted June 18 2023 - 10:03 PM

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Carnegie Tech is the premier institution on earth for exobiology and the study of alien cultures. It's a tough field to break in to, and our protagonist is very worried she won't get tenure.

Earth is in a 2nd golden age of space exploration. We can at last detect signals of "living planets" like our own and now understand that we are incredibly far away from basically everything. Earth is in a universal backwater.

 

First contact has been made with several aliens. It's an exciting time.

The two alien worlds we have contacted are the two closest to earth. It takes decades to get out there to do research. But, these are the sacrifices one makes for science. The aliens are... very alien. After nearly 30 years of research we suspect they may have a language-- though what it might be or how to speak it is beyond us. They move at a very different temporal rate, are the size of dirigibles, and we don't even know where one individual ends and another begins.

Our protagonist hopes to travel to study these mysterious beings and make her mark in the great edifice of scientific research.  She knows it will be hard, but she is ready.

That's when her advisor asks her to come in to discuss some potential field work.

This is it!

 

Only-- when she arrives at his office he shows her a little card. It's a calling card printed letterpress on creamy white rag paper.

 

In English it reads:

"Dear People of Earth,
We the ants of Myrmecos cordially propose a programe of professional exchange. Wherein you shall send one of your natural historians to us, and we shall send one of ours to you (that we might better learn of each others planets and cultures.)

Sincerely,
The Provost of Central City University, Myrmecos"

 

Our protagonist suspects a cruel prank from the Entomology department. But, her advisor explains that it is very real.

The only issues are that this place they are calling "Myrmecos" (literally a latinization of "Ant Planet") is very very very far away. It's at the limits of possible travel. It seems that the aliens of Myrmecos have been enjoying earth media for some time now and think that we have a lot in common "It was so easy to decode!" they gush.

She will be gone for 3000 years. But, that ought to take care of tenure, right?


Starting this July I'm posting videos of my ants every week on youTube.

I like to make relaxing videos that capture the joy of watching ants.

If that sounds like your kind of thing... follow me >here<


#12 Offline futurebird - Posted June 25 2023 - 5:06 PM

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THE PARADE OF THE ANTS


When the Provost found out I was interested in attending the Ant’s Memorial Civic Parade she insisted on “using her influence” to get me a ticket for a seat in the band-stand with the dignitaries and some of the honored ants too elderly to march.
 

When Timothy found out that I had a ticket he insisted that I “use my influence” to beg a ticket from the Provost for his benefit as well. She didn’t seem as eager to offer a ticket for a woodlouse, but at least acknowledged that, with Timothy there, I would at least have someone to ask questions of, without embarrassment. In any case, who else would go with me?
 

The Ant’s Memorial Civic Parade began at an ungodly hour, just before sunrise, so to make it to our place on time I had to collect Timothy in the cool blue pre-dawn light of a Myrmecos summer’s night. He was already packed into his little carriage when I arrived outside his apartment. Timothy is not a very fast walker and for longer outings he rides in a shaded stroller with a gay little red and white striped awning. To my dismay, I saw that he was… dressed up. It hadn't occurred to me that fancy dress would matter for simply viewing the parade. Timothy had on a red and white seersucker vest over a pale pink starched high collared shirt. On his vast white round head he balanced a dandy straw hat with a spider-made lace ribbon. Instead of his spectacles with their adjustable lenses to cover his six eyes, he had 3 monicals that all shared one chain. “Good morning!” he exclaimed seeing me from some distance away, then, thinking better of shouting out on the street at such an ungodly hour he waited until I was close to whisper “Is that what you’re going to wear?”
 

I glowered.
 

But, then decided little could be done for it, and so turned my collar up hoping it would look more like a dress shirt and began pushing Timothy the four long blocks to the bandstand.

The bandstand was a lovely little wooden structure with its own rain canopy made of translucent weaver’s silk so as to not block the view. We took our places near the front of the stand. I folded up the chair assigned to Timothy and put his cart in its place. We were there a little early, only a few of the other seats were taken. From our seats we had a view of the wide avenue: perhaps for half a mile or more– Mist rolled out from the trees as the first hints of dawn warmed the air. A few insects wandered about. Faintly, I could hear the low murmur of a growing crowd.
 

The start time for the parade was the Hour of the Wasp. And, as expected, just as the bells began to ring the rest of the ants lucky enough to have bandstand tickets arrived. The bandstand was instantly filled with ants and insects greeting each other cheerfully.  All along the avenue crowds of ants appeared. Suddenly, it seemed as if everyone had left their nests at once.

The empty street looked even more empty in contrast to the crowds who emerged from the mist in the park and climbed up trees and lamp posts to get a better view. Some simply stood on top of each other as many as three ants high.
 

And the other insects of the city were not absent: Beetles and bees formed little crowds here and there. Strange insects I’d yet to meet were interspersed in the crowd.

There was great and jubilant chattering all around. Some ants waved little flags with the colors of their colony or with other symbols I could not recognize. A praying mantis, towering over the crowd, called out that he was selling balloons and who would like to buy one. A troupe of little beetles were selling hot cakes and they threw them at their customers who threw money back. The air seemed filled with sounds and colors and noise and then–
 

A horn. The sound of the horn came from far down the avenue where I could just barely see something moving. But, the sound was so pure, and so long, and so sad that it cut through the chatter and motion of the crowd, causing everyone to fall silent and turn to look.
 

The horn sounded again.
 

“The horn of war.” Whispered Timothy. Was this eerie horn a relic of that violent past?

“Is it old?” I asked Timothy. He nodded and wordlessly directed me to keep watching.
 

Someone was coming closer. A single ant walking in the center of the street. The ant was small, and light yellow in color and I knew enough to recognize her as a callow, a child.
 

The slender little figure marched, a strange high jointed walk, that must have been some kind of military pageantry.  But, she was all alone, an army of one.  She was dressed in a costume of tatters and rags, and in her bearing there was some kind of painful dignity I could not quite name. Now and then she would stop and, with great determination and purpose, blow the horn.
 

“There is a story from the Age of War of a young leafcutter ant minor whose colony was raided by the Driver ants in the night. They took everyone and everything and she was the last surviving member of what had once been a colony of millions. She picked up the war horn of her people and without fear aimed to march upon the Drivers at their bivouac– it was madness. But someone heard her blowing that horn–”

The little ant had stopped right in front of the bandstand and she lifted the horn and again let it sing out that long loud sad note. From further down the avenue we could see a rising cloud of dust. Something else was coming. Something that clattered and stomped rhythmically:  A battalion of silver ant majors with mandibles longer than the little minor’s whole body.
 

They were huge and gleamed (some bright ant having timed this moment for just the time that the first rays of sun broke through the trees on to the street.) When the tall powerful ants in their rows and columns reached the little ant with the horn they picked her up and raised her high above their heads. The silver majors stood 30 abreast and several hundred deep. They were marching in place in perfect synchrony, waiting for something, tension building.
 

Then the little ant raised the horn again and pointed with one leg as if the general of an entire army, as if the silver ant majors with their scimitar-like mandibles holding her high in the air together formed one great war horse, she blew the horn again this time commanding them. “Go!”
 

And this time the note was not sad– no, it was full of vigor and vengeance, and something about it was terrible and angry.
 

The crowd of ants watching the parade went wild cheering, and the silver ants, the fastest runners among all ants, took off at full tilt bearing the little ant along. In moments the little ant vanished beyond the reach of our vision. But, the column of silver ant majors still had not finished passing us. Battalion after battalion of huge fearsome ants– how could they keep so many war-ready majors in a time of peace? And even after wondering for some time the silver army still had not passed. It was like a freight train, which first impressed you with its length but then took so long to pass, that it first bores you, then horrifies you as you consider the sheer mass so many cars represent.
 

“Well what happened?” I asked Timothy as the billions of silver ant majors continued to march past us.

“Isn’t it clear? She led them to the bivouac of Driver ants.. And then they were massacred. Though, it wasn’t just the Silver ants she commanded.”
 

I looked up and noticed the character of the battalions of neatly arrayed major ant warriors had changed. This next group were smaller, slender, a brilliant reddish orange, and some held larvae tucked in the crook of one of their middle legs. They used the same high stepping march the lone ant had performed before she blew the horn.
 

“The weaver ants.” Whispered Timothy “Their soldiers are masters of infrastructure using silk to seal and build passages.”

“But aren’t those larvae? Babies?” I asked.

“They have always made their larvae work from such a tender age, and the adult ants who serve at that stage are born already decorated with honors.”

It still seemed wrong to me to embroil any creature so young in a war. But war is a desperate thing, I reasoned.
 

Before I could ponder this much my ear was drawn to the sound of the next part of the parade. The next billions were the largest ants I’d ever seen. Each major had a broad black head with short powerful mandibles. Their gasters were covered in stripes of brown fur.
 

“The majors of the Balbyters.” Timothy explained.
 

Next came the majors of Pheidole, who, though not large ants, still had very large heads. At the bandstand they turned their heads to look at us in unison as if they were troops in review.  Next came ants with great yellow jaws and heart-shaped yellow heads. Then ants with mandibles like cooking tongs, then ants so well armored that their mandibles could not be seen and each ant had a disc-shaped head.

“Those are the Cephalotes Majors.” Timothy explained.
 

The variety and organization of the army was astounding– but even more remarkable was the sheer size. Thousand and thousands of ants, all reenacting that day that all the colonies first united to take on the Drivers and end the age of war.
 

“What happened to the Driver ants in the end?” I asked. Timothy was silent for a bit as if considering his answer.
 

“The ants don’t like talking about it very much… but the Driver ants are no more. In their zeal the army commanded by the Orphan would hunt down every colony and wipe every driver ant from the face of Myrmecos.”

“I do think they regret going so far.” Added Timothy. “It’s not much talked about, but it was not like every Driver ant colony was as ruthless as the ants who killed the Orphan’s colony.”
 

We sat without speaking for a time listening to the rhythmic sound of the marching ants.


Starting this July I'm posting videos of my ants every week on youTube.

I like to make relaxing videos that capture the joy of watching ants.

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#13 Offline futurebird - Posted June 28 2023 - 2:46 AM

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A collage of visual ideas for drawing how ants might ride a 1940s subway.

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Starting this July I'm posting videos of my ants every week on youTube.

I like to make relaxing videos that capture the joy of watching ants.

If that sounds like your kind of thing... follow me >here<


#14 Offline Serafine - Posted June 28 2023 - 11:39 PM

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How are your ants reading books? Considering ants tend to have crap eyesight and use their antennae for communication i'd imagine them using something like braille (which should actually be easier to make than actual printing "normal" books as you don't need ink).

And maybe like odor dispensers for urban navigation (or ants who's job it is to maintain the pheromone trails, although i'd assume they have some machinery to assist them)?


Edited by Serafine, June 28 2023 - 11:39 PM.

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We should respect all forms of consciousness. The body is just a vessel, a mere hull.

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#15 Offline futurebird - Posted July 31 2024 - 2:24 AM

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When the ants first developed written language it was natural that they would use pheromones. But, recording scents on paper presents many challenges. Some pheromones are volatile and may dominate an entire page— others decay or change meaning over time. So the ants developed textured patches, little squares each designed to best absorb and preserve a particular pheromone— what was even better was that the specificity of these many textures made it possible to revive old volumes.

 

By grouping patches in sets of 6 more complex ideas could be conveyed. By skipping application of pheromones altogether, relying only on texture to convey meaning, books become less ceremonial & more information-dense. This is the origin of what humans call “ant braille” though, you must imagine, rather than binary raised or lowered dots a labyrinth of little squares representing 80 core textures & 200+ lesser-used variants whose meaning changes based on proximity & amplitude.


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#16 Offline ANTdrew - Posted July 31 2024 - 5:54 AM

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Get a copy of the novel, Consider Her Ways by Canadian author Frederick Philip Grove. I can’t recommend that novel enough. It is the best example of ant fiction I’ve read.
"The ants are a people not strong, yet they prepare their meat in the summer." Prov. 30:25
Keep ordinary ants in extraordinary ways.




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