Chien C. Lee

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  • Soldiers termites (Longipeditermes longipes) position themselves aside a column of workers, ready for defense.  They are able to squirt a noxious secretion from the snout-like projection on their head, which serves as an effective chemical deterrent for ants and other predators. Sarawak, Malaysia (Borneo).
    cld10102082.jpg
  • Often mistaken for a trail of marauding ants, the lichen-feeding Processional Termites (Hospitalitermes spp.) are quite unlike most of their kin not only in the fact that they don't eat wood, but they also forage in the open, often during daylight. Their wide columns of workers can form an impressive sight as they flow like a stream over a hundred meters in the Bornean rainforest, returning with balls of lichen they have scraped from the bark of branches high in the canopy. How can they afford to venture out in the open whereas most other termites are furtive creatures of darkness and secrecy? The answer lies with their defense: they devote as much as 30% of their ranks to soldiers, which are equipped with chemical-squirting nozzles on their heads to repel ants, their prime enemy. Sarawak, Malaysia (Borneo).
    cld10102685.jpg
  • A column of worker termites transport portions of masticated leaves back to the colony.  This species (Longipeditermes longipes) plays an important role in the recycling of leaf litter on the rainforest floor. Sarawak, Malaysia (Borneo).
    cld10102660.jpg
  • Nasutiform termite solders (Hospitalitermes nigriantennalis) defend a column of workers with chemical weaponry, each is capable of squirting a noxious fluid from the gland on its head. Batang Ai National Park, Sarawak, Malaysia (Borneo).
    cld1301462.jpg