CHAPTER IV. 



ON THE RELATIONS OF ANTS TO OTHER ANIMALS. 



The relations existing betweenants and other animals are 

 even more interesting than their relations with plants. 

 As a general rule, not, however, without many remark- 

 able exceptions, they may be said to be those of deadly 

 hostility. 



Though honey is the principal food of my ants, 

 they are very fond of meat, and in their wild state 

 ants destroy large numbers of other insects. Our 

 English ants generally go out hunting alone, but 

 many of the species living in hotter climates hunt in 

 packs, or even in armies. 



Savage has given • a graphic account of the ' Driver ' 

 ants {AnoTnma arcens West.) of West Africa. They 

 keep down, he says, 'the more rapid increase of noxious 

 insects and smaller reptiles ; consume much dead 

 animal matter, which is constantly occurring, decaying, 

 becoming offensive, and thus vitiating the atmosphere, 

 and which is by no means the least important in the 

 Torrid Zone, often compelling the inhabitants to keep 



' 'On the Habits of the Driver Ants,' Trans. Ent. Soc. 1847 

 p A. 



