Anai-anai ialah kelompok serangga sosial yang termasuk dalam
kumpulan dikenali “order Isoptera”. Pada kebiasaannya, anai-anai membuat sarang
dalam tanah (rumahnya dipanggil “pungsu”) atau pada kayu reput. Ada juga yang
memilih untuk mengurumi (membuat sarang) pada batang atau perdu pokok, dan di
rumah kayu.
Terdapat satu ayat (ayat 14) di dalam Al-Qur'an (Surah Saba'), yang menyebut hal anai-anai, yang antaranya, ada kaitannya dengan sejarah/cerita penghujung kewafatan Nabi Sulaiman (a.s):
Saba’(34): 14
Setelah Kami tetapkan berlakunya kematian Nabi Sulaiman,
tidak ada yang menunjukkan kepada mereka tentang kematiannya melainkan semut
putih (anai-anai) yang telah memakan tongkatnya. Maka apabila ia (mayat Nabi Sulaiman) tumbang,
ternyatalah kepada golongan jin itu, bahawa kalaulah mereka sedia, mengetahui
perkara yang ghaib nescaya mereka tidak tinggal sedemikian lamanya di dalam
azab (kerja berat) yang menghina.
(And when We decreed for Solomon death, nothing indicated to
the jinn his death except a creature of the earth (termites) eating his staff. But when he
fell, it became clear to the jinn that if they had known the unseen, they would
not have remained in humiliating punishment).
Berikut ini satu penemuan tentang "kehebatan" anai-anai:
Ants deploy
brain as well as muscle power
Wednesday July 29, 2015
07:53 AM GMT+8
07:53 AM GMT+8
Ants are not
mindless insects. A study shows that if a group is off-course, the 'scout' ant
subtly signals a needed change in direction and the rest follow. — File picPARIS,
July 29 — Ants have an astonishing ability to mix collective muscle with individual
initiative for heavy lifting, a study published yesterday has revealed.
In
experiments, researchers showed how a dozen or more ants working in unison to
haul, say, a large insect can adjust their course based on intelligence
provided by a single ant joining the effort.
Realising
somehow that the group is off-course or headed for trouble, the “scout” subtly
signalled a needed change in direction by tugging at a different angle.
Rather than
resisting, the others fell into line.
“The
individual ant has the idea of how to pass an obstacle but lacks the muscle
power to move the load,” explained Ofer Feinerman, the study's main architect
and a researcher at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel.
“The group
is there to amplify the leader's strength so that she can actually implement
her idea,” he told AFP.
Just as
surprising, the same ant that took the lead will, 10 to 20 seconds later, yield
that role to another new arrival with more up-to-date information.
“As far as
we can tell, the scout is no different than the other ants,” Feinerman said by
email.
“No one
designates the leader, she — not he — designates herself because she has
current knowledge about the correct direction.”
Rowing in
unison
Ants are
among the very few animals, besides humans, that organise among themselves to
collectively carry loads far heavier than an individual member of their
species.
One of the
challenges, for ants or humans, is finding a balance between synchronised action,
or conformity, on the one hand, and the flexibility needed to adapt, on the
other.
Animals
living in groups — a school of fish, a flock of sheep — have evolved to act in
concert, a quality needed for coordinated movement.
This is what
allows the ants to pull together, rather than apart, Feinerman said.
But
sometimes this so-called “behaviour conformism” is a drawback, which is where
the information-bearing scouts come in.
The
interplay of group and individual effort can be compared to the relationship
between a eight-person team rowing in unison and their coxswain, who steers the
boat and keeps an eye on the competition.
“One
difference, though, is that to guide the load the [lead] ant must pull as
well,” Feinerman said.
“While all
the ants 'row' in the same direction that the boat is moving, the leader rows
in the direction she knows to be correct.”
The
researchers speculate that an ant temporarily assumes leadership simply by
showing up, and that “she does not need to communicate her presence,” Feinerman
added.
The ant
chosen for the experiments, Paratrechina longicornis, is an invasive species
found worldwide. In summer, they typically transport large — at least compared
to their three-millimetre bodies — insects to their nests for consumption.
The study,
published in Nature Communications, also discovered that there is an
optimal number of ants — about 15 — for reaching maximum speed when hauling.
For the
experiments, the scientists used Cheerio cereal that had been stored in a bag
of cat food overnight to make it attractive to the ants. — AFP
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.