
Kidnapper Ants Steal Other Ants' Babies - And Brainwash Them
Season 6 Episode 16 | 4m 46sVideo has Closed Captions
Kidnapper ants raid other ant species' colonies, abduct their young.
Kidnapper ants raid other ant species' colonies, abduct their young and take them back to their nest. When the enslaved babies grow up, the kidnappers trick them into serving their captors – hunting, cleaning the nest, even chewing up their food for them.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback

Kidnapper Ants Steal Other Ants' Babies - And Brainwash Them
Season 6 Episode 16 | 4m 46sVideo has Closed Captions
Kidnapper ants raid other ant species' colonies, abduct their young and take them back to their nest. When the enslaved babies grow up, the kidnappers trick them into serving their captors – hunting, cleaning the nest, even chewing up their food for them.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipThese ants are planning a heist.
They don’t have a choice.
They can’t feed themselves on their own.
But they’re not plotting to steal food.
They steal other ants.
They’re kidnappers.
As the sun sets in California’s Sierra Nevada mountains, scouts leave their underground nest.
They’re looking for ants of an entirely different species.
This nearby colony of black ants knows what’s out there.
So every afternoon, they block the entrance to their own nest to protect themselves.
But it’s too late - a scout spots them.
She rushes back to mobilize her sisters.
They charge out across the forest floor.
It’s a raid!
The black ants try to defend themselves from the onslaught, but it’s not enough.
They’re overwhelmed, panicked.
The raiders start digging.
Once they’re in, they know exactly what they’re after.
The most prized possession ants have… their young.
These white things are pupae - developing juveniles.
The kidnappers use their pointy, oversized mandibles to snatch them up and haul the young back to their nest.
Now, you’d think when the stolen ants grow up, they’d realize they’re surrounded by strangers… … in the nest of a totally different species.
But ants don’t really recognize each other by sight.
They use smell.
So the kidnappers coat the young ants in secretions from glands near their mouths, imprinting their colony’s scent onto the new arrivals.
As they grow up, the young black ants think they’re at home, with their own family.
They have no idea.
So the newly enslaved ants just get to work, leaving the nest to forage for food for their captors.
The black ant’s mandibles are serrated for grinding up food.
The kidnapper ants jaws are really only good for one thing: grabbing young ants.
They can’t even chew their own food.
So the kidnappers get their captives to regurgitate food right into their mouths, like kind of a pre-made smoothie.
It’s called trophallaxis.
The captive ants do pretty much all the work in the colony, like keeping up the nest and looking after the young.
So the kidnappers can spend their days just lounging in a big pile… until it’s time to storm the forest floor again, looking for more unsuspecting ants to join their ranks.
- Science and Nature
A series about fails in history that have resulted in major discoveries and inventions.
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