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Ants recognise infected wounds and treat them with antibiotics

eigenket
62 replies
20h47m

That's insanely impressive and almost scary level of adaptation/smart behaviour from the ants.

Edit: it feels more like something you'd read from Adrian Czajkowski/Tchaikovsky rather than reality.

20after4
51 replies
20h35m

Have you seen what else ants can do? They are full of insanely impressive/scary/smart behaviors.

Ants farm aphids. They don't just find aphids and collect their "honeydew" excretions. They actually bring the aphids to the plants and then tend to them.

Ants harvest the sunflower seeds from my sunflowers. Not just some of the seeds. If I leave the flowers even one day past the time to harvest those seeds, the ants get every single seed. They do it by having some ants up on the flower popping out the seeds, and more ants down below collecting them off the ground. That's some incredible coordination. And these are tiny ants, not some big powerful ants. It's mind boggling to think any creature is able to pull it off. I'm honestly surprised they don't have megalithic structures built of huge stones. Though their underground colonies are megalithic in scale compared to the ants.

Maybe instead of ancient aliens we should look into ants as the actual builders of the pyramids.

bloopernova
15 replies
20h14m

Ants can pass the mirror test too, which only a very select few mammals/birds have passed.

https://www.animalcognition.org/2015/04/15/list-of-animals-t...

Nick87633
12 replies
19h29m

Mirror test of LLMs might be an interesting experiment to design!

klyrs
4 replies
19h15m

What is an LLM? Is it the trained weights? The source code? The frontend? Where do you even hold the mirror?

speed_spread
1 replies
18h59m

You get it to talk with itself.

datameta
0 replies
17h42m

Wait, I think that might recursively turn into the singularity. So we can do it now, but around GPT-6.5 or LLaMa 5, unless this transformer-based explosion maxes out our silicon circuit tech by then, be careful.

Kalabasa
1 replies
10h18m

Yeah, wouldn't the "test" be essentially letting it generate tokens forever, without user-written prompts.

Since an LLM has no sense of self or instances, what does it mean for it to talk to itself?

In a way, doesn't it already "talk to itself" when generating sentences, e.g., its output token gets added to the input tokens successively?

ben_w
0 replies
8h30m

Since an LLM has no sense of self or instances

While I'd be surprised to learn they have anything a normal person would call a sense of self, it would only be mild surprise and even then mainly because it means we finally have a testable definition. (Amongst other things, I don't buy that the mirror test is a good test, but rather I think it's an OK first attempt at a test).

We're really bad at this.

In a way, doesn't it already "talk to itself" when generating sentences, e.g., its output token gets added to the input tokens successively?

I'm not sure if that counts as talking to itself or not; I think that I tend to form complete ideas first and then turn them into words which I may edit afterwards, but is that editing process "talking to myself"?

And this might well be one kind of "sense of self". Possibly.

pcrh
2 replies
10h54m

Indeed it would! Is anyone here going to try to do that?

As an observer is needed to assess the LLM, perhaps the easiest test is copy-paste between two instances and then ask chatGPT, or whichever LLM, "who were you talking to?".

isaacfung
0 replies
5h22m
Someone
0 replies
8h15m

You can’t use two instances. They both would have individual selfs.

I think an experiment would be to feed back whatever a LLM says to that same LLM, and see whether they’ll, at some time, say “why are you doing that to me?”

largbae
1 replies
15h44m

We can have ChatGPT talk to itself by simply opening two chats and pasting back and forth. But the LLM can't win: if it notices then it will be called "wrong" because it is talking to another instance of itself. If it does not notice then it is "wrong" because it failed to notice.

ben_w
0 replies
8h26m

With perfect duplication it's hard to tell; I imagine that if we had a magic/sci-fi duplication device that worked on people, and a setup that resolved the chirality problem, the subjects would have similar difficulties.

waffleiron
0 replies
19h11m

The mirror test would be less interesting if we could program/teach animals to pass or fail it. So I wouldn’t be impressed if a LLM is able to pass these types of tests.

justinl33
0 replies
19h8m

Probably wouldn't be very enlightening.. there's no baseline sentience to base any claims of 'self awareness' off of.

ahoka
1 replies
19h14m

They probably can’t and the paper claiming it might be bogus, unfortunately.

bloopernova
0 replies
17h7m

Damn, I admit I didn't read the paper, and it's too late to edit my comment, sorry :(

BelleOfTheBall
10 replies
15h33m

I'm amused that people call ants doing pretty human behavioral quirks "scary". Obviously the implication is that they're smarter than we knew, but I'm giggling imagining some other species going "Have you seen what humans can do?" and then just describing the beef industry, Boston Dynamics robot dogs or Facebook.

kombookcha
4 replies
12h3m

Hey, two out of those three things are kinda scary!

janosdebugs
3 replies
10h25m

Two?

20after4
2 replies
10h16m

Yeah I was wondering which one of those gets a pass. All three are terrifying IMO.

RCitronsBroker
1 replies
9h12m

most definitely not the botson dynamics robot dogs, that’s wayy too DARPA to be not scary as hell

867-5309
0 replies
8h40m
20after4
4 replies
10h20m

Humans are absolutely terrifying. The most scary and dangerous of all creatures. I'm sure humans kill far more than any other animal. Perhaps only bacteria and viruses exceed the level of scary that humans have attained.

But ants are pretty damn close to human levels of scary, IMO. Look up the acid spitting crazy ants and tell me that's not a little bit scary.

LargeTomato
3 replies
10h0m

Mosquitoes kill more than any other animal. Specifically a parasite inside the mosquito that causes malaria.

eigenket
2 replies
7h56m

According to some quick googling I just did malaria kills around 600-700 thousand people per year, while in 2016 road traffic accidents killed around 1.3 million (both numbers attributed to the World Health Organisation).

Assuming that a majority of the road traffic deaths are attributable to humans then humans seem to very easily beat mosquitos/malaria at killing other humans.

LargeTomato
1 replies
7h52m

If you start in 2016 your data is correct. If you start from 4000BCE I believe the largest human killer ever is malaria.

eigenket
0 replies
7h7m

You may be correct, I'm not sure. Apparently about half of humans ever have lived in the last 2000 years, and the death rate for those in the earlier half (before 2000 years ago) was overwhelming dominated by very high child mortality. I guess the answer probably depends on what proportion of those infant deaths were due to malaria.

ChrisMarshallNY
8 replies
19h13m

There was an episode of Cosmos[0], where Neil deGrasse Tyson talks about bees, and shows how they are actually a hive intelligence that could be compared to us.

Ants have a similar hivemind.

It was pretty awesome.

[0] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ubE9hjrsHmI

shiroiuma
7 replies
12h29m

The ants already sound much smarter than humans.

Ants: use antibiotics to treat wounds

Human: I'm not using that! It has microchips from Bill Gates in it!

pjmlp
6 replies
10h31m

Well, it helps that ants don't question their overlords.

bouvin
3 replies
8h20m

The real beauty is that ants do not have overlords – their intelligent behaviour is emergent, not centrally controlled.

ssener2001
0 replies
3h51m

tiny animals like ants cannot know order and balance . They are like tiny robots. By carrying out duties far exceeding its own power, everything testifies to the All-Powerful One’s existence

"Yes, the All-Wise Creator summarizes the principles of the Clear Book in most beautiful form and abbreviated fashion and with a particular pleasure and through a special need, and includes them in beings. If everything acts thus with a particular pleasure out of a particular need, it unknowingly conforms to the principles of the Clear Book." Quran's Light

pjmlp
0 replies
7h18m

Ants don't rebel against the ways of their society, each ant knows their place and doesn't have aspirations to be something else, other than what it was predestined to be at birth.

I guess there are a couple of movies about that. :)

datadeft
0 replies
7h24m
otabdeveloper4
1 replies
6h19m

Ants don't have overlords. From the standpoint of genetics, one ant colony is a single organism. The queen mates only once in her life, before starting a colony. All the subsequent individual ants are from the genetic material of that foundational mating.

When ants from different colonies meet (with different genetics lineages) they fight wars of total annihilation. Ant colonies do not cooperate.

eigenket
0 replies
5h49m

This is a bit simplistic, especially the last paragraph. There are quite a lot of examples of ants which aren't particularly related to each other cooperating [1].

Probably the most common example is that colonies which have been around for a while and are stable often adopt new queens that turn up from outside. Then multiple queens are producing workers and you get a colony made of many distinct "families".

There are even examples of nests consisting of ants from different species. Quoting from the article I referenced earlier

Ants engaged in parabiotic associations cooperate in a variety of ways including shared nest defense, trophallaxis, and communal use of trail pheromones. For example, “ant gardens” in the Neotropics (Davidson, 1988; Orivel et al., 1997) and in Asian rainforests (Kaufmann and Maschwitz, 2006; Menzel and Bluthgen, 2010) are often co-inhabited by species from the genera Crematogaster and Camponotus (along with a number of other genera) .... While brood chambers are kept separate, the rest of the colonies mix freely within the joint nest. In addition to sharing foraging trails to plant-based resources (Menzel et al., 2010), both species will defend the nest although larger Camponotus tend to exhibit the majority of the defensive behaviors (Menzel and Bluthgen, 2010).

[1] https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fevo.2021.73675...

ants_everywhere
5 replies
19h39m

Ants really are incredible.

Not only do they farm aphids, they also farm fungus. Leafcutter ants bring the leaves to their fungus farm. Then they eat the fungus.

So ants farm both livestock and crops.

They also form super colonies.

datameta
3 replies
17h41m

That's an obscene cognition/cooperation to body weight ratio.

eigenket
2 replies
7h49m

I would guess(without much evidence) that you don't need much cognition in each individual ant. You can get very complex behaviours out of very simple rules in idealised systems like cellular automata.

My bias (for essentially aesthetic reasons) is to assume that each ant is basically pretty dumb, and the cool complex behaviors happen as an emergent property of how they respond to the stimuli they recieve (especially all the pheromone messages they get from other ants).

datameta
0 replies
38m

I have a similar hunch. They seem to be a distributed sensor, compute, and actuator network.

SCM-Enthusiast
0 replies
34m

each ant is basically pretty dumb, and the cool complex behaviors happen as an emergent property of how they respond to the stimuli they recieve (especially all the pheromone messages they get from other ants).

Can't ants be swapped out as humans here?

20after4
0 replies
10h15m

They farm MY crops. Little bastards. >D

eurekin
3 replies
9h8m

I'm especially surprised a tiny milligram worth of brain is able to provide such high level functions and coordination. I'd normally expect all those neurons would be occupied fully with processing visual stimuli, smells and coordination limb movement alone.

eigenket
2 replies
8h7m

I guess just hard to tell how much of that is attributable to cognition inside the brain of each ant, and how much is network effects with each ant responding in individually stupid ways to the pheromone (and other) signals they create.

Each ant could be very dumb while the system of ants as a whole are quite "smart" (I.e. exhibit complex and interesting behaviours).

eurekin
1 replies
7h44m

How is learning performed than? By means of genetic evolution - on the level of a individual or the whole colony (queens mutations)?

eigenket
0 replies
6h43m

I guess it happens on multiple levels. No reason it would be exclusive to one.

Certainly individual ants learn stuff

https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rsos.190778

But adaptions also happen by evolution and (very speculatively) might also happen at the colony level by it changing its responses somehow. E.g. I could imagine an ant colony suddenly faced with many attackers adapting by breeding more soldiers.

ycombinete
0 replies
9h11m

I would love to see a timelapse of them harvesting the sunflowers, that is absolutely incredible.

sillywalk
0 replies
15h46m
pharrington
0 replies
17h25m

Ants have been doing the whole "advanced civilization" before long before humans even evolved. There's a ton of stuff we still have to learn about, and from, them.

edit - didn't see eigenket's comment basically saying the same thing

luqtas
0 replies
2h49m

they also have a really organized division of labor, like "some wait at the nest for some days, then after the ones who went out get tired, the resting ones assume their positions etc."

https://antsauthority.com :D

eigenket
0 replies
20h34m

I've seen and heard a lot of what they can do, but certainly not everything. Pretty sure humanity as a whole is very far from understanding everything ants do and why.

janandonly
2 replies
9h13m

I'm surprised I don't have nightmares from his book with the planner filled with ants that are elevated to intelligence

SCM-Enthusiast
0 replies
32m

with fire!

JoBrad
0 replies
8h28m

I think the ants are still used as mostly dumb workers.

bayindirh
2 replies
20h7m

Assuming only the humans have certain traits or level of intelligence/knowledge in some areas of life becomes a more foolish act as we discover what other living things are capable of.

I, for one, welcome our ant overlords.

Voultapher
1 replies
9h10m

One could call it a human suprematist mindset.

SCM-Enthusiast
0 replies
33m

or anty-human.

kromem
1 replies
8h14m
kromem
0 replies
8h5m

Link to the PDF of the research itself for those interested:

https://www.journalofscience.net/showpdf/MjY4a2FsYWkxNDc4NTI...

ilrwbwrkhv
0 replies
20h40m

90% reduction in mortality. Wow.

atticora
0 replies
19h11m

That's insanely impressive and almost scary level of adaptation

I fully agree while thinking the same thing about our immune system behavior. The insanely scary impressive thing is that this level of adaptation is the rule not the anomaly in biological systems.

boznz
16 replies
19h5m

I am in a constant battle with ants in my kitchen, they are tenacious little buggers and the only way that really works is to keep the kitchen immaculately clean!

Joel_Mckay
4 replies
17h38m

I live in an area where Monomorium pharaonis is an invasive species, and there are many fruit trees in our city (mostly varieties of cherry and plum).

Leave this Mixture in a shallow lid/dish next to the Ant entry point:

1 part borax dish soap

3 parts granulated sugar

15 parts warm water

They will ingest the mixture, and return the payload to the colony if dilute enough. A few days later the slow poison should start to knock out the group.

Indeed, once a path is chemically marked it is very hard to keep ants out, and failure to remove a waste bin lures them in again.

Mixing kiln dried diatomaceous earth with water for treating the surrounding external structure also helps knock down anything with a chitin exoskeleton. It can be effective if a colony has attached to a tunnel system.

Best of luck =)

throwanem
1 replies
7h20m

once a path is chemically marked it is very hard to keep ants out

Nonsense. A wipe with plain white vinegar suffices to dissolve the pheromone trail, and seems to deter foragers for some while after.

Joel_Mckay
0 replies
4h6m

I can totally see people removing concrete slabs, laminated floors, window drip drains, and exhaust vents inside walls. The ants won't understand human idealism, but most aphids and fruit flies sure love vinegar smells. =)

progman32
1 replies
16h33m

Three other options (admittedly less effective, but the upside is no killing).

1. Give them what they want. I have a bottle of cheap corn syrup I use as a truce offering. If I start getting scouts or the beginnings of an incursion I just dump a big glob of the syrup right next to their nest outside. Everyone disappears from my house within a half hour. Usually, they forget about the kitchen for a couple weeks. Then I repeat.

2. Peppermint oil. The ants here will avoid it. If I smear it across an active ant line it interrupts it even.

3. Ant moat. Works great for sugar products and pet dishes. I use 4 shot glasses full of soapy water holding up a small kitchen rack. The rack is perched on 4 small submerged pillars I added to the rack's feet.

Edit: of course an invasive species needs to be dealt with in accordance to the threat to the local ecosystem. I'm just providing options for simple nuisance ants.

Joel_Mckay
0 replies
15h6m

"1. Give them what they want."

Not a great idea, as people can skew the ecosystem into causing more harm. More ants can increase Aphid populations that spread viral plant diseases (see Huanglongbing or citrus greening disease).

"2. Peppermint oil."

Never tried this one, but seems expensive. Also, most mint products are illegal to import in some areas, given it can carry symbiotic fungus spores that may decimate food crops.

"3. Ant moat. "

Many species have building skills, and some will even build tiny twig/gravel roads/bridges over dangerous/irritating substances.

They are fascinating little creatures, and an important part of the ecosystem. =)

ethbr1
3 replies
18h58m

Plot twist: ants just aesthetically prefer tidiness and so engineered your behavior to ensure a clean kitchen.

jxy
1 replies
15h1m

Now that I think of this, they probably hired mice and cockroaches, too.

ethbr1
0 replies
13h15m

Subcontracting work is the true sign of an intelligent species.

ace2358
0 replies
17h42m

Would read that sci-fi

powersnail
1 replies
9h36m

Sadly that's not always effective. My house is immaculately clean, no food residue for ants to find, but they still come......for water!

They get into toilet tank, cat's water bowl, flower vase, my cup, looking for nothing but water. Not once had I seen them moving any sort of food in my house, (they also doesn't seem to be interested in cat food), but they always manage to find water. I wonder how they manage such a low calorie diet.

It took quite a bit of effort to caulk every one of their entrance; which seems to be the most effective measure so far.

lupusreal
0 replies
6h33m

Leave a water bowl outside for them maybe?

coding123
1 replies
17h56m

Best way is to kill them and not clean up the bodies. They smell like mint usually. Keeps them away

powersnail
0 replies
9h32m

My experience with ants (at least with common small black ants) is that they tend to eventually remove the dead body after some poking around, rather than keep away from the crime scene.

quickthrower2
0 replies
16h1m

only way that really works is to keep the kitchen immaculately clean

Prevention better than cure, as always :-).

qiqitori
0 replies
17h54m

I've had excellent results with ant bait containing hydramethylnon. Just placed a couple bait containers in the room I had them; they were gone the next day and it's been almost three years.

lukas099
0 replies
14h48m

They're helping you find spots you missed.

jandrese
13 replies
21h9m

Or as they call them "ibiotics".

dataflow
2 replies
17h11m

Took me a good minute to figure this out, I kept thinking it was some kind of anti-Apple joke I wasn't understanding.

jamala1
1 replies
9h10m

Is the joke removing the "ant" prefix?

dataflow
0 replies
9h6m

Yes

Razengan
2 replies
12h55m

What is HN coming to

thinkingemote
0 replies
8h40m

I also assumed the same, so I looked back in time. If you read some of the early HN posts, the quality, length, variety is the same as is now. (length seems longer now).

There's even a bunch of "what did this site become" comments from way back too!

I think it's we who change, we mature, grow older, more grumpy or less grumpy.

ozfive
0 replies
11h21m

Dang does an amazing job of moderating but I am sure it's near impossible to keep up at this point. At least the overly political article submissions aren't making it through. I've been reprimanded and have learned the error of my ways in comments. Sometimes people just need the reminder. No matter what you are going through in life it's not ok to take it out on others.

xenospn
1 replies
16h3m

Thy probably teach this in ropology class.

orliesaurus
0 replies
15h19m

this is an iquate joke

withants
0 replies
15h0m

with ants

whutsurnaym
0 replies
12h51m

And if that doesn't work, their immune systems fight off infection using "ibodies"

leesec
0 replies
17h29m

Nice

duluca
0 replies
14h57m

Came here for this as soon as I read the headline. Satisfied!

bch
0 replies
13h50m

Thanks ants. Thants.

nickjj
12 replies
18h55m

I watched a video once on YouTube about ants and there was a section where they encountered termites and had an all out battle.

The termite warriors would literally bite off the ant's limbs in 1 quick bite.

They mentioned the antibiotics allowed ants to resume basic functionality within a day. Imagine losing your arm at 9am and then still be useful by 3pm with no more than a few seconds or a minute of someone giving you antibiotics. We're not talking about regeneration here, but walking around and acting as normal as you can be given your missing limb(s).

ericpruitt
8 replies
17h19m

I watched a video once on YouTube about ants and there was a section where they encountered termites and had an all out battle.

Do you have a link?

nixass
2 replies
8h12m

Check "Life on our planet" on Netflix. It's about dinosaurs but also has plenty of bits around evolution. In one episode they talk about ants vs termites and also focus on that particular bit (limbs getting damaged or ripped off)

https://www.netflix.com/title/80213846?preventIntent=true

Also, visually very impressive documentary

nickjj
1 replies
5h22m

Haha, you know what. This must be where I saw it because I went ~6 months back in my YouTube history and CTRL+F'd for ants and saw nothing except a documentary about fire ants which didn't cover this topic.

What a horrible assumption I made thinking I saw this about a year ago, I got tricked into thinking it must have been a long time ago since my YouTube history was coming up empty. I did watch life on our planet shortly after it was available. This is one of the pitfalls of watching lots of media on different platforms, it all blends together. I watch a lot of documentaries on both platforms.

nixass
0 replies
4h16m

I have that problem too. Not only with video but information consumption in general. Things I believed I read 18 months ago happened only 4-5 months back max. Crazy what overconsumption of information does to us

nickjj
1 replies
16h35m

Do you have a link?

Unfortunately no. It was probably about a year ago and searching around for "ants" videos isn't coming up with anything. I've noticed that after a while YouTube will remove the red border to indicate you've watched a video.

I can say for sure it wasn't a Kurzgesagt video, but they have a number of videos about ants. I haven't seen all of them but their videos are usually high quality: https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=Kurzgesagt+ants

The video I'm thinking about had pretty big black "warrior" ants scout out an area and engage with termites, I'm not sure of their species. Based on my memory it felt like a documentary style video. It was all live captured video with a narrator, not an animation.

To be honest I'm not super into ants. It was one of those videos that somehow landed in my feed and I was pleasantly surprised because I like learning about new things.

gverrilla
0 replies
8h37m

You can try looking in your youtube History

buryat
1 replies
16h29m

i found a video of a standoff between termites and ants even more impressive: https://youtu.be/C96w-7B2W8I

ozfive
0 replies
11h19m

I turned the volume up expecting to hear war drums at least. I've seen this video before. Makes me think of police and mafia.

jprete
0 replies
16h48m

https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=Megaponera+anal...

The top one ("Megaponera analis - termite predators of the african savannah") was decent although the accent was hard for me to understand. It's definitely not the video the GP referenced, though, because the narrator doesn't mention the wound treatment or antibiotics, just that the injured ants are carried home.

sva_
1 replies
16h40m

Consider crabs amputating their own limbs https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=v241TF-cSzU

gumby
0 replies
15h32m
judge2020
0 replies
17h29m

We're not talking about regeneration here

That's reserved for the Axolotl https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Axolotl#Regeneration

sethbannon
7 replies
15h39m

Amazing. Also neat that we may actually learn to treat human infections better after this discovery.

"Erik Frank. Laurent Keller also adds that these findings 'have medical implications because the primary pathogen in ant’s wounds, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, is also a leading cause of infection in humans, with several strains being resistant to antibiotics'."

Love imagining leading scientists from big pharma rushing to investigate the compound cocktails ants are using to make the next blockbuster drug.

danielheath
3 replies
14h44m

And here I thought their anty bodies were enough to fight disease.

Xeamek
2 replies
10h25m

What?

leosanchez
0 replies
10h12m

Antibody

burrish
0 replies
5h15m

ant-y-body

vibrio
2 replies
9h43m

This is a pedantic note, but in general Pharma does not care about antibiotics drug development - It’s an economic desert. If it was a cancer or serious rare disease drug, they’d be grinding up buckets of ants yesterday.

RmTheGame
1 replies
4h23m

Well rare disease is also an economic desert. Its only because of Government regulation big pharma started to care about these.

Mainly the Orphan Drug Act of 1983 with provided tax incentives as well as subsidized research. There is also the Rare Disease act of 2002 but that IMO is less signifigant.

Don't forget that for rare diseases affecting children the government awards fast track vouchers. These allow you to shorten the approval time of another drug (or sell it for a few hundred million for another company to do the same.

See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orphan_Drug_Act_of_1983 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rare_Diseases_Act_of_2002 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Priority_review

vibrio
0 replies
2h32m

I totally agree. Although I'm not sure similar vouchers for antibiotics would be sufficient for the same success, as there are also logistical, financial and scientific advantages that have enabled rare disease drug development. Many rare disease being targeted are monogenic, providing a very 'clean' scientific mechanism, and higher success rates. The clinical studies can be small well defined population as pre/neonatal genetic testing is now routine, and supportive Foundations are often instrumental. Financially, insurers/payers have been amenable to huge per-patient prices in rare diseases because of low volume and often impressive efficacy.

Developing antibiotics has lower technical success rates. The medical need is more acute and distributed across more broad populations with much of them poor making patients 'harder to find'. Any novel antibiotic are typicaly held in reserve until after generation of resistance to all the current drugs, limiting volume. Commonly, physician and patient over-/mis-usage of antibiotics generates resistance, generating a limited 'valuable' life span of the drug.

There are many governmental/regulatory incentives being developed, and at least one industry-backed fund (AMR action fund) supporting early research but it’s still a challenge to build business plans for this.

spike021
5 replies
18h39m

I'm sure it's unrelated but this reminds me of my dog. If I ever have a paper cut or like dry skin on my hands from eczema, as soon as he sniffs the cut or damaged skin he tries to keep licking them like he's... cleaning them out or something? He's my first dog so I haven't really looked into why dogs do that.

Of course I wash my hands with soap very well after he does that since he obviously has many germs.

Just find that very interesting.

shiroiuma
1 replies
12h27m

If I ever have a paper cut or like dry skin on my hands from eczema, as soon as he sniffs the cut or damaged skin he tries to keep licking them like he's... cleaning them out or something? He's my first dog so I haven't really looked into why dogs do that.

If it were an injury on the dog, it's very helpful for preventing infection.

However, because it's on you, it's a good way for you to get an infection and need your limbs amputated.

https://people.com/human-interest/man-who-lost-arms-legs-nos...

spike021
0 replies
11h22m

Yeah, like I said, I wash very well after! Also I wouldn't let him do it on a deep cut/laceration. it's just like cracked skin and whatnot at worst.

tiltowait
0 replies
18h37m

Yep, that's why dogs do that. The term "licking your wounds" comes from that behavior (which many animals do).

sva_
0 replies
16h37m

Wolves do that as well.

mr_toad
0 replies
7h28m

Saliva can clean the wound and contains anti microbial agents and white blood cells.

whycome
2 replies
12h37m

Ants are like a real-life machine learning model.

shostack
1 replies
12h32m

Read Children of Time and have your mind blown.

whycome
0 replies
2h54m

Thanks for the rec! That seems right up my alley!

Re: ants. A quick google suggests there could be around twenty quadrillion ants on earth. With such volume, they could literally "learn" through pure trial and error like a machine learning model.

quickthrower2
2 replies
16h2m

How is a self-created antibiotic different from a T-cell or antibody?

mr_toad
0 replies
7h42m

Antibiotics are just simple chemicals that kill bacteria - with the caveat that they preferably don’t also kill the patient.

melagonster
0 replies
12h2m

T-cell is a type of cell. they can move and work. antibodies are small proteins generated by cell. usually, antibodies binding to something and help immune system work. antibiotics are some molecules we can add it into our body and only kill pathogens.

so they are different terms. in another way, if the molecules will be used as drug, it probably call antibiotic.

kaitocross
2 replies
9h31m

Does that mean that Ants have a better healthcare system than the USA?

melagonster
0 replies
2h2m

To be frank, providing free treatment for limb fractures is quite demanding in terms of standards

bantunes
0 replies
8h47m

Pretty low bar to clear, isn't it?

treprinum
1 replies
8h45m

"With the exception of humans, I know of no other living creature that can carry out such sophisticated medical wound treatments," - aren't cats/dogs doing the same by licking their wounds, applying ample amounts of lactoferrin that is a potent antibacterial/antiviral substance?

baz00
0 replies
8h41m

Well if it's like my cat, it licked its butt beforehand and cost me vet bills a couple of times so YMMV.

gwill
1 replies
20h46m

For treatment, they then apply antimicrobial compounds and proteins to the infected wounds. They take these antibiotics from the metapleural gland, which is located on the side of their thorax. Its secretion contains 112 components, half of which have an antimicrobial or wound-healing effect

I was curious about this metapleural gland and found this article on its uses: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21504532/#:~:text=The%20meta....

soperj
0 replies
18h43m

Gotta wonder what the other 56 components do, and if we're using them for anything?

treme
0 replies
6h57m

and we only learned to wash hands 130 years ago

rvba
0 replies
14h21m

What will happen?

Some pharma company will vopy the antibiotic.

Farmers will give it like candy to animals and in third world countries they will dump it to rivers.

Bacterias get resistant. So the antibiotic becomes useless for humans and then ants stsrt to die off.

rq1
0 replies
4h4m

I hope ants won't end up copyrighted.

nerpderp82
0 replies
21h8m

If the wounds become infected, there is a significant survival risk. However, Matabele ants have developed a sophisticated healthcare system: they can distinguish between non-infected and infected wounds and treat the latter efficiently with antibiotics they produce themselves.
luxuryballs
0 replies
14h31m

I hope those ants have a valid government approved doctor’s prescription for that

justinl33
0 replies
19h12m

conspecific: a member of the same species.

axsl
0 replies
15h3m

super interesting!

a_gnostic
0 replies
3h14m

Time to stop preaching about eating insects, and start offering them equal rights! I, for one, will not participate in the insect holocaust, and will embrace their mesosoma in friendship.

SCM-Enthusiast
0 replies
25m

They take these antibiotics from the metapleural gland

The fact that a gland could arise through natural selection makes over 112 different components from anti-biotics to chemicals blows my mind.

The underlying theory that "random mutation" and errors in the copying of ant DNA created a secretion sac is crazy to me. I imagine this first ant was like the "Mule" in foundation, where he could introduce chemicals to "Control and conquer". There seems to be some underlying learning mechanism built within "Random mutation".

Madmallard
0 replies
16h18m

distributed cognition is a really bizarre thing that we need to learn more about

turns out problem solving and intelligence don't have to be localized at all and even not having them localized doesn't necessarily hinder the ability for it to handle complex problems either

Bluescreenbuddy
0 replies
20h36m

A wound for ants