Intimate Relations Life in the Undergrowth


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There's an insect in this garden that all gardeners loathe -

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aphids.

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They've made enemies of gardeners,

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but in the undergrowth they have friends -

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ants.

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Ants herd aphids to the best possible feeding places,

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just as human shepherds will herd their sheep to the best pastures.

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And just as shepherds protect their flocks against wolves,

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so ants protect the aphids against their insect enemies.

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Ladybirds are among the most dangerous.

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They, after all, eat aphids, so the ants must get rid of them.

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That's not easy -

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it's quite hard to get a grip on the polished shell of a ladybird.

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But eventually, success.

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Aphids excrete a liquid that ants relish, honeydew.

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That's why ants protect them.

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Such close relationships are frequent among insects,

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perhaps because they've had so long to develop them.

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They appeared on land, after all,

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about a hundred million years before any backboned animal.

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And they can also evolve much faster,

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because they can produce several generations within a single year.

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So perhaps it's not surprising that they have developed

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relationships between one another of a complexity that blows the mind.

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These associations extend not only to other insects, but to plants.

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They were established at a very early period.

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Plants are the basis of all life,

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only they can combine minerals in the ground with gases from the air

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and produce something worth eating.

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Insects, however, not only eat them,

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they also exploit them in much more devious ways.

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Tropical rainforests are famous for being thick, tangled masses of vegetation,

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but in this one in Peru there are mysterious clearings,

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where only one, or at the most, two kinds of trees will grow.

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The local people call such places as this "devil's gardens"

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and believe that spirits kill other kinds of trees.

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And the real killers of those trees?

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Well, they've only just been discovered.

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The leaves of the surviving trees

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all have these swellings on their stems,

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and going in and out are armies of tiny, tiny ants.

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The swellings are their homes,

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specially developed for them by the tree,

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and in them, safe from predators, the ants keep their eggs and larvae.

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They even keep domestic livestock - white scale insects,

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which, like aphids, supply the ants with drinks of honeydew.

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Producing this accommodation also benefits the tree,

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for the ants provide their landlord with a valuable service -

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they guard it against its enemies.

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All kinds of insects will eat a plant's leaves given the chance...

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..but they don't get a chance, not on this tree.

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So the caterpillar goes elsewhere.

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This is a more formidable leaf muncher,

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a kind of giant grasshopper,

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several thousand times bigger than any individual ant.

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That's not so easy to shift.

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But it does have a weak spot.

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If you can say that any insect has a heel,

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then this one has an Achilles heel.

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And the ants seem to know it.

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Enough is enough.

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The ants not only repel their host's animal enemies,

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they also, perhaps more remarkably, keep competing plants at bay.

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A squad of them leaves the barracks

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and sets out on one of their regular patrols of the neighbourhood.

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They've found a newly sprouted sapling.

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Perhaps it's grown from one of their landlord's seeds,

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in which case, all well and good,

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but this one hasn't - it's an intruder.

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They go into action biting its stems.

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Reinforcements arrive.

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Hundreds of tiny jaws cut into its stems.

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The sapling begins to wilt.

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But bites alone are not enough for the ants to achieve their ends.

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They lift their abdomens and inject formic acid

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into the crippled plant's wounds.

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The poison spreads through the plant's tissues,

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hastening its death.

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And within a few days of being comprehensively stung,

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all these plants are dead,

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and the ants, or the devils, have extended their garden still further.

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But the benefit of this drastic gardening is not restricted to the plants, the ants also profit.

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They have ensured that their plant landlord can extend its territory without competition.

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And that provides them with more homes,

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so they, too, can increase their numbers.

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It's one thing to provide food and shelter in return for protection,

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but it's quite another thing to be compelled to provide a home

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where before there was none.

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But some insects have the ability to force a plant to do just that.

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They're called gall-makers, and this oak tree is infested with them.

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This odd wrinkled object at the base of an acorn

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is known as a knopper gall.

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Inside, there's the tiny grub of a minute wasp.

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To understand how it got there, we have to go back to last spring.

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This tiny insect, scarcely bigger than a mosquito,

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is one of these gall wasps.

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There are lots of them flying around the oak flowers.

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Most of the flowers by now have been pollinated

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and are about to develop into acorns.

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The gall wasps, too, have mated,

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and this female is looking for a place to lay her eggs.

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She thrusts her ovipositor into the base of the fertilised flower

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and injects an egg.

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And that triggers a profound genetic change in the growing oak bud.

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It develops not into an acorn,

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but into something very different - a gall.

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Within, the tiny larva, whose secretions have caused the change,

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feeds on the oak tree's tissues.

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As summer proceeds, the galls become increasingly hard and woody.

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Autumn comes, and the oak tree starts to shed its leaves.

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It's shutting down for the winter.

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And with its leaves go both acorns and galls.

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Plant and insect life is suspended.

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But unseen changes are nevertheless taking place.

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Spring comes at last.

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Inside the gall, something starts moving.

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The larva has turned into an adult wasp.

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It has spent nine months within the oak tree's tissues.

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It has only a few weeks of its life left.

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Now, as an adult, it must look for another oak to inject with eggs.

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A single oak tree may be afflicted by 70 different kinds of gall,

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each produced by a different species of wasp,

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and each with its own particular contorted shape.

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These hard shells may seem to be effective defences

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for the little grub inside them, but not necessarily so.

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This is another kind of gall wasp,

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and she's not a genetic engineer, she is a burglar.

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Behind her, she trails her equipment for breaking and entering, a drill.

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She carefully selects a site for her operations and takes aim.

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She flicks away the drill's sheath and starts work.

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Her aim has to be very accurate if she is to strike her target -

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the larva at the gall's centre.

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The tip of her drill has a sharp cutting edge of metallic zinc,

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which pierces the gall tissues with ease.

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When she detects that she's reached the central chamber,

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a microscopic egg travels down the centre of the drill

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and into the larva.

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The operation is over.

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Her offspring will now hatch in the gall's centre,

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consume the flesh of the resident larva

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and take over the gall.

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Galls are worldwide.

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California, for example, has other species of oak tree

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and other kinds of gall.

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These particular ones are relatively tiny, the size of peppercorns.

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You would hardly notice them except for one thing.

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They jump.

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And not only do they jump,

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they jump for three days.

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The tiny larvae within flick themselves about

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inside their minute chambers.

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Why they should do so is not clear.

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Perhaps it's a way of moving their homes into cracks and crevices,

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where they're out of the reach of predators and parasites

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and shaded from the hot Californian sun.

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Another gall in Hungary protects itself in a more complex fashion.

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It recruits insect guardians.

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This gall is producing nectar.

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It's sweet.

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And it's producing it, not for the benefit of the oak tree,

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but for the benefit of the tiny grub that lies within the gall,

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because the nectar attracts ants

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and ants serve as defenders against any other intruders.

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And if you want to see how valuable they are,

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let me remove some.

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Within a few minutes, a different kind of gall wasp appears.

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It's another of those burglars,

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looking for an existing gall into which it can inject its egg.

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But the ants have now returned, and they attack the intruder.

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Away it goes.

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The ants, having driven off the wasp,

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take their reward of nectar.

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In the normal course of events, oak trees don't produce nectar,

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but many plants certainly do.

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It's a way of attracting insects

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that will transport their pollen from one plant to another.

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And the colourful flowers are advertisements,

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proclaiming that nectar is there for the taking.

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But the plants must also ensure

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that visiting insects collect the pollen as well as nectar,

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and that leads to all kinds of complexities.

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Like many plants,

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the pyramidal orchid has a way of ensuring that they do.

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A burnet moth probes into the orchid's nectar store,

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and as it does so,

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a horseshoe-shaped mass of pollen clips onto its long proboscis.

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Inconvenient it may be, but the moth can't shift it.

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Away it goes to another flower,

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taking the pollen with it,

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and this time as it probes for a drink,

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a speck of pollen is transferred to the female part of the flower.

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The job is done.

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The traffic of insect pollinators to and from flowers is so heavy,

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and in particular so predictable,

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that it's not surprising

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that some invertebrates have learned to exploit it.

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A white crab spider sits almost invisible

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on a white flower, waiting in ambush.

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And it catches a bee.

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The spider is clearly taking advantage

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of the flower's advertising.

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It looks superbly camouflaged to our eyes,

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but insect eyes are different to ours

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and see parts of the light spectrum invisible to us.

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Under ultraviolet light,

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we can get a better idea of how they see things.

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And most surprisingly,

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the spider looks more obvious to them than it does to us.

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Why should that be?

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Perhaps it's because ultraviolet markings on some flowers

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serve to guide insects to nectar,

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so maybe the spider's colour is a positive attraction for bees.

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Certainly, honeybees seem more likely to visit flowers

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with crab spiders on them than those without,

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often with fatal consequences.

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The relationships between the animals that live in the undergrowth

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are full of such deceits and impostures.

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Here in Australia, there's an intriguing example

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that has only just been discovered.

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This is a feather-legged bug.

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It too manages to persuade prey to come close,

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but its invitations are aimed, not at bees, but ants.

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And what the ants get is a very nasty surprise.

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Like all members of the bug family,

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this one has a long tube for a mouth.

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Most stick it into plants to suck sap.

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Using it to eat an ant is more difficult.

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The bug starts by waving to passing ants.

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The feathery flanges on its legs are so large,

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they can be seen from quite a distance.

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The ants are visibly intrigued,

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but they're not yet close enough for the bug to attack,

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so it reinforces its gestures by producing a chemical perfume

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that the ants find irresistible.

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They come closer still.

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They climb all over the bug,

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trying to find the source of this strange, compulsive smell,

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and the bug does nothing to stop them.

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Where does that smell come from?

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Is it on the bug's legs?

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The bug now answers the ants' questions.

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It lifts itself up and reveals a gland on its underside -

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that's what's producing the smell.

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The ant presses its head against the bug's chest

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to actually taste the gland.

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It's the perfect position for its own execution.

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The bug stabs its mouth into the back of the ant's head.

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So a tube can be used to suck nourishment from an insect,

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as well as from a plant.

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This is the rogue of the bug family, a killer.

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Ants are among the most numerous, widespread and frequently exploited members of the undergrowth.

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These in Australia collect seeds and store them underground.

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Plants encourage them to do so,

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by adding a tasty capsule to their seeds.

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That may seem odd, but these ants don't eat all the seeds they store.

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In fact, seeds are more likely to germinate below ground than above.

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But not everything on this forest floor is what it seems.

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When it comes to putting your eggs in a suitable place,

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some insects persuade other insects to do the job for them.

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This little object looks like a seed,

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and certainly, it's fallen from above

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and that ant seems to think it's worth eating.

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But actually, it hasn't come from a plant.

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It's come from another insect.

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And this is it.

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It's rather difficult to see,

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because it looks exactly like a dried leaf,

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but it's a stick insect.

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There's its head,

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antennae and that's the tip of its abdomen.

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As an adult like this,

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it spends all its time up in the trees eating leaves.

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And when the time comes to lay, and this one is doing so,

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all she does is simply flick away the egg

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and let it fall to the ground.

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But that's not quite as risky as you might think.

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Wherever you are, you can be pretty sure that some ants will turn up,

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looking for food,

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and that is exactly what the stick insect's eggs look like,

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a nutritious seed, complete with that fatty capsule at the tip.

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So the ants start to haul them away.

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Although the ants eat a great number of the seeds they store,

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stick insect eggs don't seem to be quite as tempting.

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At any rate, the ants after all their labour,

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usually leave the stick insect eggs untouched.

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While the seasons pass, the eggs lie underground,

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hidden from birds and any other predators that might eat them.

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They may remain there safe for up to three years,

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but eventually they hatch.

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It's only at this early stage of its life

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that a stick insect actually runs.

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The youngsters positively scamper up into the tree branches.

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There they will take up their adult life of leisure -

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well camouflaged, stolidly chewing leaves.

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Giving your offspring a good start in life can take a lot of effort,

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so some insects have evolved highly complex strategies

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to induce other species to become nursemaids on their behalf.

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This Californian desert hardly seems the best place to find nursemaids,

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but blister beetles have an amazing way of discovering them.

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It starts, simply enough, with the female beetle.

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She has dug a hole and is now laying her eggs in it.

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That done, she abandons them.

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A few centimetres below the surface of the sand,

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conditions are good for eggs.

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Not too cold, neither too hot, even in the heat of the day.

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Six weeks later, they hatch.

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But these sands are very barren and scorching hot.

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Somehow the tiny larvae have got to find food,

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and they won't find it here.

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Their survival depends on teamwork.

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Together, as a closely co-ordinated group,

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they climb up a stem of withered grass.

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When they get to the top, there's nowhere else to go.

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They look dangerously exposed to the sun and to other predators,

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but there they stay in a tight squirming mass.

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For those that can get there, the top of this stem

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has become a stage for a remarkable piece of deception.

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What these larvae want is a lift, a ride, and they want it so badly

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that sometimes they'll even try and get it from a human finger.

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But what they're really searching for is not a human finger.

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They're searching for another insect.

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Here it comes, a female digger bee,

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leaving a tunnel that she's just dug for her own young.

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She's off to gather pollen.

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She packs it into baskets on her back legs,

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and takes it back to her burrow.

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It'll provide valuable food for her young when they eventually hatch.

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And here comes a male.

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He's on the lookout for a female.

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To him, the cluster not only looks like a female,

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it smells like a female.

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For the beetle larvae are producing a perfume,

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a pheromone that is exactly like that emitted by a female bee.

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He alights in order to mate,

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and in seconds is covered by the larvae that swarm all over him.

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At first he seems stunned by the shock

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of his sudden increase in weight.

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But then he's off again.

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And now his luck improves.

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This really is a female.

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And while he mates, his passengers jump ship.

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Now they're all onboard a female bee.

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She, having mated, goes back to her nest to lay,

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taking the larvae with her.

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At last, the young beetle larvae have reached safety, and food -

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the store of pollen that the female digger bee worked so hard

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to collect for her own young.

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So they hop off, and tuck in.

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Not only do they consume the pollen.

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When that runs out, they will eat the young bee larvae too.

0:27:580:28:03

Blister beetles are not alone in using couriers

0:28:050:28:08

to take their offspring to food.

0:28:080:28:11

The young of this botfly, here in Brazil,

0:28:110:28:14

feed on the blood and tissues of living cows.

0:28:140:28:17

But how is a female to get them there?

0:28:170:28:20

She's a big insect, so big that cows would notice if she landed on them

0:28:200:28:25

and would probably flick her off.

0:28:250:28:28

She needs a lightweight courier -

0:28:280:28:31

a housefly, a fraction of her weight -

0:28:320:28:34

that will do nicely.

0:28:340:28:36

She drops down to stalk it.

0:28:370:28:40

She's got it.

0:28:460:28:48

She manipulates the housefly into the right position.

0:28:480:28:52

And now, one by one, she glues her eggs onto the housefly's abdomen.

0:28:520:28:58

Within a few seconds,

0:29:010:29:03

the housefly has been coated by about 30 cream-coloured eggs.

0:29:030:29:08

The botfly releases its hapless messenger.

0:29:100:29:14

The housefly seems well aware that it's carrying an extra load,

0:29:150:29:19

but it can't get rid of it.

0:29:190:29:21

So it goes back to its normal business,

0:29:300:29:33

which includes visiting cows to drink their sweat.

0:29:330:29:37

A small fly, unlike the lumbering botfly, is no real irritation,

0:29:400:29:45

and is able to feed largely unhindered.

0:29:450:29:47

The fly mops up the sweat with its pad-shaped mouth parts.

0:29:520:29:57

But as it feeds,

0:29:570:29:59

so the warmth of the cow's body causes the botfly's eggs to hatch.

0:29:590:30:03

The larvae are armed with tiny hooks

0:30:090:30:13

which help them to get a grip on a cow's skin and bore into it.

0:30:130:30:17

So in a few minutes, a cow can acquire a dozen botfly larvae

0:30:230:30:28

feeding away beneath its skin.

0:30:280:30:31

Licking won't get rid of them now.

0:30:310:30:34

A couple of months later, the full-grown larvae emerge

0:30:360:30:39

and drop to the ground.

0:30:390:30:41

There they will burrow into the soil, pupate and turn into adults.

0:30:420:30:48

All kinds of creatures, great and small,

0:30:510:30:54

are exploited by insect parents in this kind of way.

0:30:540:30:57

This is Costa Rica, and here lives a species of orchard spider.

0:30:570:31:03

They construct horizontal orb webs,

0:31:030:31:06

as lovely as those made by any spider.

0:31:060:31:08

But one individual has a hanger-on.

0:31:110:31:14

An anonymous-looking grub is clinging to her abdomen.

0:31:140:31:18

She seems little affected by having a passenger,

0:31:240:31:27

and every day, as usual, she builds a new and perfect web.

0:31:270:31:33

She is just as efficient a hunter as ever,

0:31:340:31:37

but every catch she makes, she shares in effect,

0:31:370:31:41

with her passenger, for the grub is sucking her juices.

0:31:410:31:45

Her passenger stays with her for some two weeks,

0:31:580:32:02

slowly growing in size, at her expense.

0:32:020:32:06

And still, daily, she constructs a new web.

0:32:070:32:11

Then one evening, when, as usual, she starts to spin,

0:32:120:32:16

something seems to have gone dramatically wrong.

0:32:160:32:20

She seems incapable of making her normal beautiful orb.

0:32:250:32:29

What she produces has no shape, no radiating spokes, no sticky spiral.

0:32:290:32:34

It's just an untidy tangle.

0:32:340:32:37

The grub is responsible.

0:32:370:32:40

It has injected her with a hormone

0:32:400:32:42

that has spread to her brain and deranged her.

0:32:420:32:45

She has only an hour or so to live.

0:32:490:32:51

This is her last act.

0:32:510:32:55

Small claspers inflate on the grub's back.

0:32:550:32:57

With these, it grasps the wreckage of the web

0:32:570:33:00

so that it will not fall as the dying spider loses her grip.

0:33:000:33:04

It sucks the remaining fluid from the spider's body.

0:33:080:33:12

Slowly, the liquid is withdrawn.

0:33:160:33:20

Even the spider's legs are emptied,

0:33:230:33:26

until the corpse is no more than a husk.

0:33:260:33:30

The grub has no further use for it.

0:33:330:33:35

And now the grub, clinging to the spider's last tangled web,

0:33:380:33:42

starts to spin for itself.

0:33:420:33:44

It needs a shelter in which to reorganise its body -

0:33:510:33:55

a cocoon.

0:33:550:33:57

Inside the lacy walls, its body is breaking down,

0:34:000:34:05

for it has to be reassembled in a very different form.

0:34:050:34:09

At last, the killer is about to reveal its true identity.

0:34:140:34:20

It's a wasp.

0:34:310:34:33

Now it must fly off to find a mate,

0:34:330:34:36

so that another wasp egg may be attached to another orchard spider.

0:34:360:34:41

The opportunity to find creatures to parasitise in the undergrowth seem almost endless,

0:34:490:34:56

and yet surprisingly, there are some parasitic wasps

0:34:560:34:59

that find their victims in water, in lakes and ponds like this one.

0:34:590:35:04

They're extremely small, about a quarter of a millimetre long,

0:35:040:35:09

in fact one of the smallest of all insects.

0:35:090:35:12

And I've got some in this test-tube.

0:35:120:35:14

To give you an idea of just how small they are,

0:35:140:35:17

I'll drop this pin in alongside them to give a sense of scale.

0:35:170:35:22

Yet these tiny specks have eyes, legs, feelers

0:35:240:35:28

just like any other insect.

0:35:280:35:30

They're known as fairy wasps,

0:35:380:35:41

and spend nearly all their lives underwater.

0:35:410:35:45

They make a tiny water-flea,

0:35:450:35:46

itself only the size of a grain of sand, look like a giant.

0:35:460:35:51

They're so minute,

0:35:510:35:53

they can lay their eggs inside the eggs of other insects,

0:35:530:35:57

and they choose those laid by water beetles.

0:35:570:36:00

Water beetles lay their eggs inside plant stems.

0:36:030:36:08

A female fairy wasp, having located one,

0:36:080:36:12

uses its microscopically thin ovipositor

0:36:120:36:16

to inject up to 100 or so eggs

0:36:160:36:18

into just one of the beetle's.

0:36:180:36:21

And here, they hatch.

0:36:280:36:31

The young wasps feed and grow,

0:36:340:36:37

consuming the water beetle's undeveloped young.

0:36:370:36:41

Not only that, they mate here.

0:36:440:36:47

Then, at last, they leave the shell of the beetle's egg.

0:36:560:37:01

The females must now lay,

0:37:110:37:13

and some will be able to do so in other ponds,

0:37:130:37:17

because, in spite of everything, they still have wings.

0:37:170:37:20

Other bigger parasitic wasps have totally lost their wings.

0:37:230:37:28

You can find them on many a British heath.

0:37:280:37:30

This one, Methocha, looks rather like an ant,

0:37:320:37:35

and insects that live by hunting ants easily mistake it for one.

0:37:350:37:39

The tiger beetle is a very active ant-hunter.

0:37:400:37:43

It chases them and runs them down.

0:37:430:37:46

And very successful it is.

0:37:550:37:58

Earlier in its life, of course, as a larva,

0:38:000:38:03

a tiger beetle can't run around.

0:38:030:38:06

Instead, the larva catches ants by waiting in ambush.

0:38:060:38:10

It plugs the entrance to its burrow with its armoured plate-like head.

0:38:110:38:16

If an ant touches that, it's as good as dead.

0:38:160:38:20

It works every time.

0:38:310:38:33

Methocha, however, is a more awkward customer.

0:38:440:38:48

The beetle larva is waiting with jaws agape.

0:38:550:38:59

But Methocha is more agile than the usual ant,

0:39:060:39:08

and it manages to slip out between the beetle larva's jaws.

0:39:080:39:12

It grabs the larva's soft body, and pulls.

0:39:160:39:20

And now it stings it.

0:39:250:39:28

Methocha climbs out of the tunnel,

0:39:300:39:33

waiting for the poison to take effect.

0:39:330:39:35

The sting has only paralysed the larva,

0:39:410:39:45

and the wasp drags the helpless creature farther down its burrow.

0:39:450:39:49

Now she lays her egg onto it.

0:39:510:39:54

To prevent anything interfering with her grub while it stays underground,

0:40:010:40:05

feeding on the paralysed beetle larva, she blocks up the entrance.

0:40:050:40:10

This is the longest and most laborious part of her motherly duties.

0:40:260:40:32

But now, without any more work from her,

0:40:320:40:34

her young will have all the food it needs to develop into an adult.

0:40:340:40:39

Underground nests are certainly among the best protected of all insect nurseries,

0:40:440:40:49

and indeed, they're very difficult for parasites to break into.

0:40:490:40:53

Ants defend their colonies against intruders with great ferocity.

0:40:550:41:01

Yet here in this meadow in central Europe, there are ants' nests,

0:41:010:41:06

where intruders live undetected, and there's one right here.

0:41:060:41:11

This is the caterpillar of the blue butterfly,

0:41:190:41:25

and it's lived in this nest undetected and protected by the ants

0:41:250:41:30

and fed by them for the last two years.

0:41:300:41:34

Indeed, it's been so thoroughly accepted by the ants

0:41:340:41:38

that they will try and rescue it

0:41:380:41:41

in preference to the young of their own queen,

0:41:410:41:44

as in fact, they're doing right now.

0:41:440:41:47

How do these caterpillars get into the ants' nest in the first place?

0:41:510:41:56

Alcon blue butterflies begin their courtship in June and July.

0:42:020:42:08

They're surely one of the loveliest sights of a European summer,

0:42:080:42:11

as they flutter and flirt among the flowers of the meadow.

0:42:110:42:15

Male and female meet, and join.

0:42:250:42:28

Once they have mated,

0:42:330:42:35

the female Alcon blue must find a gentian plant.

0:42:350:42:39

Here, she lays her eggs.

0:42:470:42:49

The caterpillars, when they hatch,

0:43:020:43:05

stay feeding on the gentian for a couple of weeks.

0:43:050:43:08

But eventually, they fall to the ground.

0:43:090:43:12

There are ants everywhere in a meadow like this,

0:43:140:43:17

and they soon find it.

0:43:170:43:19

It smells just like one of their own larvae,

0:43:210:43:24

and they start to haul it back to where one of their larvae should be,

0:43:240:43:28

in their nest.

0:43:280:43:30

Other foragers from the same nest have found another.

0:43:310:43:34

During the next few weeks,

0:43:370:43:39

as many as half a dozen may be taken back to the nest.

0:43:390:43:42

Here they're hauled down to the nursery chambers

0:43:470:43:51

and put with the ants' other eggs and larvae.

0:43:510:43:54

And because the caterpillars continue to produce a pheromone

0:43:560:43:59

exactly like that produced by the young ants themselves,

0:43:590:44:03

they're treated as if they were young ants,

0:44:030:44:05

even though they're bigger and a different colour.

0:44:050:44:08

The caterpillars mimic the sound the ants make when they beg for food,

0:44:100:44:14

so the workers dutifully feed and clean them.

0:44:140:44:18

You might think that this caterpillar has protected itself very well by deceiving these ants,

0:44:240:44:30

but life in the undergrowth is full of surprises.

0:44:300:44:34

An ichneumon wasp.

0:44:370:44:39

Like the blue butterfly, it wants to get its young into an ants' nest.

0:44:390:44:44

But not merely as lodgers. It has a more sinister intention.

0:44:440:44:49

Somehow or other, in a meadow full of ants' nests,

0:44:500:44:53

it can detect which one harbours a butterfly caterpillar,

0:44:530:44:56

and this, it decides, is one of those.

0:44:560:44:59

Once inside, the ants start to attack it, as you might expect.

0:45:010:45:04

But then, the ants' behaviour changes. There's pandemonium.

0:45:040:45:09

The wasp has released a pheromone that makes the ants attack one another.

0:45:090:45:13

With the defenders fighting among themselves,

0:45:210:45:24

the wasp is able to go deeper into the nest.

0:45:240:45:28

It's reached the nursery, and here lie the caterpillars.

0:45:290:45:32

Now they are defenceless.

0:45:320:45:34

The wasp sets about injecting each of them with an egg.

0:45:400:45:45

A few ants do their best to prevent this,

0:45:480:45:51

but there is no real opposition.

0:45:510:45:53

While most of the ants continue to fight among themselves,

0:46:020:46:05

the wasp finds a second caterpillar.

0:46:050:46:08

Another egg is laid.

0:46:110:46:13

The wasp leaves.

0:46:240:46:26

With the wasp gone, the ant colony slowly returns to normal.

0:46:290:46:34

The caterpillars are still there, alive and apparently well,

0:46:340:46:38

and the ants continue to care for them.

0:46:380:46:41

Once the caterpillars are fully grown,

0:46:410:46:43

each starts to construct the chrysalis,

0:46:430:46:46

which all butterflies need as a protection,

0:46:460:46:49

while they turn themselves into adults.

0:46:490:46:52

Each chrysalis is cleaned and protected by the ants,

0:46:540:46:58

as if it were one of their own pupae.

0:46:580:47:00

One begins to hatch.

0:47:040:47:06

Out of it comes...

0:47:180:47:19

yes, a blue butterfly.

0:47:190:47:22

It leaves its foster home.

0:47:260:47:29

Out in the open, its limp wings can expand.

0:47:310:47:35

And now it's ready to flutter and flirt, just as its parents did.

0:47:370:47:43

And the ants are still bewitched by the traces of pheromone

0:47:440:47:48

clinging to the empty shell the butterfly leaves behind.

0:47:480:47:53

But there are still others in the nest as yet unhatched.

0:47:530:47:57

And out of this one comes...

0:48:040:48:07

not a butterfly,

0:48:070:48:08

but a wasp.

0:48:080:48:10

Hard-wired into the microscopic brain of this ordinary-looking insect

0:48:190:48:24

are a whole series of skills, sensitivities and reactions

0:48:240:48:28

that will enable it, in its turn,

0:48:280:48:30

to give its own offspring a special start in life.

0:48:300:48:34

It can detect what the ants themselves find undetectable.

0:48:340:48:38

It can tell the difference between an ant larva

0:48:380:48:42

and the larva of the butterfly, the caterpillar.

0:48:420:48:45

In a meadow of a hundred ants' nests,

0:48:450:48:48

it can even detect the one nest that has the caterpillar in it.

0:48:480:48:53

How it does that, we have no idea.

0:48:530:48:57

So it seems that among the animals of the undergrowth,

0:48:570:49:00

there are many mutually beneficial partnerships,

0:49:000:49:03

but exploitation and deception can work just as well.

0:49:030:49:08

Quiet, please.

0:49:200:49:21

Sound, Steve. GT11, take one.

0:49:210:49:24

They defend themselves with stings and very, very powerful stings,

0:49:270:49:32

which is why I have to wear a bee suit.

0:49:320:49:35

Because if one bee attacks you...

0:49:360:49:38

..within seconds there will be hundreds,

0:49:400:49:42

indeed probably thousands of them all around you

0:49:420:49:45

launching a mass attack and stinging you.

0:49:450:49:48

From giant bees to marauding ant armies,

0:49:510:49:54

and termites in their fortress homes,

0:49:540:49:57

in next week's episode of Life In The Undergrowth,

0:49:570:49:59

we enter the world of the social insects.

0:49:590:50:03

But understanding what's going on in these super societies,

0:50:040:50:09

let alone filming them, wasn't ever going to be easy.

0:50:090:50:13

These are Giant Asiatic Honey Bees.

0:50:160:50:20

In their colonies of tens of thousands,

0:50:200:50:22

they're said to be the most dangerous animals in the Malaysian Jungle.

0:50:220:50:26

What's more, they live in the tops of very tall trees.

0:50:260:50:32

And I am about to pay them a visit.

0:50:320:50:36

But first, with such a potentially dangerous subject,

0:50:360:50:40

is a thorough safety briefing from our expert, Niko Koeniger.

0:50:400:50:44

He has studied bees for over 15 years.

0:50:440:50:46

No, really.

0:50:460:50:48

Believe me, the bees are coming,

0:50:480:50:50

and if you are not protected, it's horrible.

0:50:500:50:53

We would all wear bee suits, but that's not a protection in itself,

0:50:530:50:58

as cameraman Gavin Thursden explains.

0:50:580:51:01

Niko was telling us when he was up in a tree on ropes,

0:51:010:51:03

resting against a branch, and the little branch broke,

0:51:030:51:07

so he swung straight into one of those nests, and he got attacked.

0:51:070:51:11

By the time he got down, he'd been stung 200 times

0:51:110:51:15

through his bee suit and clothing.

0:51:150:51:17

But that's where James Aldred comes in. He's the rigging expert

0:51:170:51:22

and in charge of getting me up and down the tree.

0:51:220:51:25

In the event of an attack,

0:51:250:51:26

the bee suit will give me enough protection,

0:51:260:51:29

so long as his system of ropes and pulleys gets me down to safety fast.

0:51:290:51:33

Are you sure you still want to go through with it?

0:51:330:51:36

I thought somebody ought to ask!

0:51:360:51:38

The best precaution is in properly understanding the bees,

0:51:380:51:42

and that's where Niko comes into his own.

0:51:420:51:46

He's the first to go up.

0:51:460:51:48

He visits the bees every day for his research,

0:51:500:51:53

and they've become accustomed to ropes and bee suits,

0:51:530:51:55

so he's confident that they won't be scared of me.

0:51:550:51:58

However, for Gavin to get into a position to film,

0:52:020:52:05

we had to bring in a crane.

0:52:050:52:07

That's something the bees have not seen before.

0:52:070:52:10

So it's important to bring it in slowly,

0:52:100:52:13

whilst Niko watches the bees for any signs of agitation.

0:52:130:52:17

He knows from experience that when they're calm,

0:52:190:52:21

there's a regular traffic to and from the comb,

0:52:210:52:24

but when nervous, this stops,

0:52:240:52:26

and then they start dropping off the bottom of the comb

0:52:260:52:29

in the prelude to an attack.

0:52:290:52:31

From his position right beneath the comb,

0:52:380:52:41

Niko is perfectly placed to watch the bees

0:52:410:52:43

and give the call to get everyone down before things get serious.

0:52:430:52:47

I'm in position, bees are OK.

0:52:470:52:51

Now all is set for my encounter with the bees.

0:52:510:52:55

Meanwhile, in Southern Africa, we had a rather different challenge.

0:52:590:53:04

These termite mounds may look like insect skyscrapers,

0:53:040:53:08

but they're more than that.

0:53:080:53:09

They are sophisticated air conditioning systems

0:53:100:53:13

that somehow cool the colony, which is buried deep beneath the ground.

0:53:130:53:19

For Life In The Undergrowth, we wanted to show how they work.

0:53:190:53:23

OK, counting down, guys.

0:53:230:53:25

Luckily for us, one man is trying to find out.

0:53:250:53:28

..Two, one...go!

0:53:280:53:30

By filling one with plaster.

0:53:300:53:33

Six tonnes of it.

0:53:330:53:36

One minute!

0:53:360:53:38

Engineer Rupert Soar hopes that by completely filling a discarded mound

0:53:380:53:43

with plaster of Paris, he can reveal its inner structure.

0:53:430:53:47

Four minutes.

0:53:470:53:48

It all needs to be timed with military precision, before the plaster sets.

0:53:480:53:53

That's it, just coming up to nine minutes now.

0:53:530:53:55

Another couple of minutes, and that'll pretty much be set.

0:53:550:53:59

A quick incision, the outer casing comes off,

0:53:590:54:03

and he can blast away the mound's sun-baked mud with an industrial hose.

0:54:030:54:08

..Start to see some structure coming through now.

0:54:080:54:11

This extraordinary structure is what's left,

0:54:160:54:20

a plaster mould of the air spaces inside the mound.

0:54:200:54:24

When you can see what the inside of a termite mound looks like,

0:54:250:54:29

you can start to understand how it works.

0:54:290:54:33

Back in England, Mick Connaire, from our graphic design team,

0:54:330:54:36

meets Rupert to hear his theory on how the air moves around inside this structure.

0:54:360:54:42

This could be a chimney that's not just open to the outside.

0:54:420:54:45

If there's enough air blowing through the top...

0:54:450:54:48

The air's drawn across the top...?

0:54:480:54:50

Now his challenge is to make a working mound not out of mud,

0:54:500:54:55

but in a computer.

0:54:550:54:56

Mick pieces it together, and for the first time ever,

0:55:040:55:08

we can start to see the termite air conditioning system in action.

0:55:080:55:12

Hot, stale air from the colony below rises up through a central chimney.

0:55:140:55:19

The wind then penetrates the mound and pumps that hot air out

0:55:190:55:24

through the labyrinth of tubes, keeping the termites fresh and cool.

0:55:240:55:28

With this graphic, we can show what a remarkable construction this is,

0:55:330:55:36

especially considering it's made by termites

0:55:360:55:39

out of nothing but spit and mud.

0:55:390:55:42

In the rainforest, it's time for me to meet the bees.

0:55:460:55:51

In the old days, I used to do this the hard way.

0:55:510:55:55

Luckily for me, James has come up with an ingenious

0:55:550:55:59

and less energetic solution.

0:55:590:56:01

OK.

0:56:010:56:02

A jungle elevator.

0:56:110:56:13

-Guten Morgen, Herr Professor.

-Good morning, Dave.

0:56:200:56:23

Little bit more. Whoa.

0:56:230:56:26

With Niko at hand and James below, I'm confident,

0:56:300:56:35

but I have to say, it's an eerie feeling dangling up here

0:56:350:56:38

on a thin rope, an arm's length from tens of thousands of giant bees.

0:56:380:56:44

For the colony, though, a mass attack is actually very costly.

0:56:440:56:49

If a bee stings you, it dies.

0:56:490:56:52

So they have evolved a quite remarkable behaviour

0:56:520:56:54

to warn off predators first.

0:56:540:56:57

And that's what I really wanted to show,

0:56:570:56:59

without distressing the bees, without getting stung.

0:56:590:57:04

OK, we'll do the first one.

0:57:040:57:07

Camera speed.

0:57:080:57:10

I've got a reproduction of a hornet,

0:57:100:57:13

which is one of the main enemies of bees.

0:57:130:57:16

I'll see if I can get them to do it.

0:57:160:57:18

Just watch. There.

0:57:180:57:20

See, there's a moving wave,

0:57:210:57:23

which passes over the surface of the colony,

0:57:230:57:26

and that not only produces an impressive pattern,

0:57:260:57:30

but it also makes it very difficult for any aggressor

0:57:300:57:34

to actually land on that moving carpet of wings.

0:57:340:57:38

I thought that was OK.

0:57:420:57:44

Beautiful.

0:57:440:57:46

-OK, David, if you could keep an eye on your safety, please.

-I will.

0:57:460:57:51

And that was it. Thanks to Niko and the bees, we got this shot.

0:57:510:57:56

My encounter with the bees was over.

0:57:560:57:59

What a relief!

0:57:590:58:01

It was a bit of a doddle, really.

0:58:010:58:03

Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd

0:58:140:58:18

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