To see accurate pricing, please choose your delivery country.
 
 
United States
£ GBP
All Shops

British Wildlife

8 issues per year 84 pages per issue Subscription only

British Wildlife is the leading natural history magazine in the UK, providing essential reading for both enthusiast and professional naturalists and wildlife conservationists. Published eight times a year, British Wildlife bridges the gap between popular writing and scientific literature through a combination of long-form articles, regular columns and reports, book reviews and letters.

Subscriptions from £33 per year

Conservation Land Management

4 issues per year 44 pages per issue Subscription only

Conservation Land Management (CLM) is a quarterly magazine that is widely regarded as essential reading for all who are involved in land management for nature conservation, across the British Isles. CLM includes long-form articles, events listings, publication reviews, new product information and updates, reports of conferences and letters.

Subscriptions from £26 per year
Good Reads  Insects & other Invertebrates  Insects  Bees, Ants & Wasps (Hymenoptera)

Ant Architecture The Wonder, Beauty, and Science of Underground Nests

By: Walter R Tschinkel(Author)
227 pages, 105 colour photos and colour illustrations
NHBS
Ant Architecture shows how you can do groundbreaking research on a shoestring budget. Beautifully illustrated and phenomenally written, this is unlike any other book on insects you have seen before.
Ant Architecture
Click to have a closer look
Average customer review
  • Ant Architecture ISBN: 9780691179315 Hardback Jun 2021 In stock
    £24.99
    #252052
Price: £24.99
About this book Customer reviews Biography Related titles
Images Additional images
Ant ArchitectureAnt ArchitectureAnt Architecture

About this book

Walter Tschinkel has spent much of his career investigating the hidden subterranean realm of ant nests. This wonderfully illustrated book takes you inside an unseen world where thousands of ants build intricate homes in the soil beneath our feet.

Tschinkel describes the ingenious methods he has devised to study ant nests, showing how he fills a nest with plaster, molten metal, or wax and painstakingly excavates the cast. He guides you through living ant nests chamber by chamber, revealing how nests are created and how colonies function. How does nest architecture vary across species? Do ants have “architectural plans”? How do nests affect our environment? As he delves into these and other questions, Tschinkel provides a one-of-a-kind natural history of the planet’s most successful creatures and a compelling firsthand account of a life of scientific discovery.

Offering a unique look at how simple methods can lead to pioneering science, Ant Architecture addresses the unsolved mysteries of underground ant nests while charting new directions for tomorrow’s research, and reflects on the role of beauty in nature and the joys of shoestring science.

Customer Reviews (1)

  • Unlike any other insect book I have seen
    By Leon (NHBS Catalogue Editor) 12 Jul 2021 Written for Hardback


    Making groundbreaking scientific contributions on a shoestring budget has become a challenge in the 21st century. But there are still opportunities. Take American entomologist Walter R. Tschinkel. With little more than scrap metal, homemade portable kilns, and one almighty spade, he has been researching the architecture of ant nests, pouring molten metal into tiny holes in the ground and digging up the resulting casts. The beautifully illustrated Ant Architecture provides a glimpse into his unusual methods but also shows the many fascinating findings and questions his research is throwing up. Supremely interesting, this is unlike any book on insects you have seen before and is already a firm candidate for my top five favourite books of 2021.

    How do you even conceive of the idea of pouring molten metal down an ant's nest to get a three-dimensional cast? It started as an innocent byline of his long-term research on fire ants in Florida. Generations of entomologists have been excavating ant nests, and some have tried to render what they found in two-dimensional diagrams with varying degrees of success. A few have even experimented with making casts using cement or plaster, but no one has become so obsessed with revealing this hidden underground world as Tschinkel has. Given the unorthodox nature of his research, it is entirely appropriate that he first gives an illustrated introduction to his methods and how he has refined his field gear over the years. The amusing anecdotes should reel you right in, as toying around with containers of red-hot molten aluminium or zinc is not for the faint of heart. The resulting casts, once dug up, are beautiful, otherworldly structures of interconnected chambers and tunnels, winding down into the soil for several metres.

    Fortunately, Ant Architecture goes far beyond mere novelty factor and pretty pictures. There are so many questions to be asked. Much of this research is still at the stage of collecting basic observations, and ahead of us lies a vast, unexplored realm. But, with patience and persistence, Tschinkel and his many students and field assistants have started to unearth the first answers. Let me give you three examples I particularly enjoyed reading about.

    The casts reveal regularities in the vertical distribution of chambers. Many nests have a dense cluster of closely spaced rooms near the surface, but fewer chambers at bigger intervals as you descend. Despite operating in total darkness, the ants somehow know how deep underground they are while excavating. The question of "how" led to a long series of increasingly ingenious experiments. Might they use the soil concentration gradient of CO2? Is it just a probabilistic phenomenon where a fixed percentage of ants stops their descent at each depth increment? Do they count steps on their way down, similar to desert ants?In all cases, the answer is no. The ants knew exactly how far down they were and started digging the appropriate rooms normally seen at that depth. The "how" is still a mystery, but we do have an idea of the cues they do not use. Biologists who do fieldwork will nod their heads, recognizing this painstaking process of eliminating explanations one by one.

    You will probably have heard ants being referred to as a superorganism. The vast majority of ants are sterile and will never directly contribute to the next generation, instead contributing indirectly by dividing labour to protect and feed the queen and rear the colony's offspring. Tschinkel's work on several species has shown the spatial organisation this takes inside of the nest. As you go down, you first pass a layer of larders stocked with seeds and other edible bits gathered from the environment. Towards the bottom of the nest, safe from harm, is the queen with her brood, tended to by young workers. As workers age, they gradually move up through the nest, working on e.g. expanding it and trafficking food and waste. Towards the end of their lifespan they take on their riskiest task: foraging on the surface. Tschinkel observes wryly that "Ants, in other words, send their old ladies out to do the dangerous work" (p. 149). There are passages in this book that cracked me up. Interestingly, their tasks change with age on a fixed schedule, as manipulations of the number of workers in different age classes show. Even if you create an artificial shortage in one age class, ants from other age groups do not switch tasks to pick up the slack.

    The last question I want to mention is whether there are evolutionary trends in nest architecture. As Tschinkel reminds the reader repeatedly, what evolves "is not the ant nest – which is just hollow space in dirt – but the behavior of the ants that dig the nest" (p. 9). Once you start comparing different species – and we have surveyed only a fraction – the variation in nest design and size is wild, as several photo galleries here show. Can we draw phylogenetic trees based on nest architecture? So far, it seems the answer is no. In some closely related groups, nests resemble each other, but in others this is not the case. Given that nests are effectively modular structures consisting of repeats of a few components such as shafts and rooms, it seems that all it takes for evolution is "a few twitches to worker behavior and voilà, different architecture" (p. 202).

    There are plenty of other supremely fascinating topics discussed here, but I will not spoil it all. As alluded to already, Tschinkel's writing is engaging and accessible, making this book an absolute joy to read. What I really appreciated are some of his sharp observations. Popular science writing makes much of the relative strength of ants and how they can easily carry many times their own mass. Tschinkel gives a more realistic perspective on allometry: "If we were the size of ants, their feats would seem ordinary to us and we would be able to match them without a problem" (p. 68). On scientific enquiry he muses that: "We can only test the hypotheses we have imagined, and thus we circle around the question. Eventually we find a reason that satisfies us, and then we stick to that story until there is compelling evidence to abandon it." (p. 76). And the introduction to chapter 8, describing milestones in life's 4 billion year evolution, is a masterclass in science writing.

    Princeton University Press has also thrown its weight behind this book. Ant Architecture is printed in full colour on heavy paper stock, illustrations have been redrawn, and nest photos are presented on grey or blue backgrounds for optimal visibility. The production values are, in short, top-notch. Whether you have only a passing interest in ants or are a seasoned myrmecologist, I besiege you to pick this up – you would be missing out on a unique book otherwise.
    3 of 3 found this helpful - Was this helpful to you? Yes No

Biography

Walter R. Tschinkel is professor emeritus of biological science at Florida State University and a world authority on ant biology. He is the author of The Fire Ants. He lives in Tallahassee, Florida.

By: Walter R Tschinkel(Author)
227 pages, 105 colour photos and colour illustrations
NHBS
Ant Architecture shows how you can do groundbreaking research on a shoestring budget. Beautifully illustrated and phenomenally written, this is unlike any other book on insects you have seen before.
Media reviews

"Among the most notable achievements of ants in their evolution has been the instinctive construction of their complex nests and trails. In this remarkable book, Tschinkel outlines the pioneering methods he has used to reveal their many secrets. The result is a major achievement in the study of animal social behavior."
– Edward O. Wilson, University Professor Emeritus, Harvard University

"In this deeply educational and wildly fun book, Tschinkel takes readers on a tour of the belowground world of ants. What makes this book stand out is that it combines witty writing, beautiful illustrations, in-depth scientific knowledge, and how-to instructions to explore ant colonies on your own. Ant Architecture is a must-have for any naturalist or lover of nature."
– Corrie Moreau, Cornell University

"Walter Tschinkel has spent decades studying the architecture of ant nests built underground in Florida's sandy soils. This book describes a wealth of discoveries – and exposes many mysteries – about the lives of ant colonies. Ant Architecture is absorbing, meticulous, and delightfully written, exploring a truly hidden part of the natural world."
– Thomas D. Seeley, author of Honeybee Democracy and The Lives of Bees

"An ant colony builds a nest that channels the flow of ants and activities, and every species does it differently. In this beautifully illustrated book, Tschinkel shows how he developed the excavation and casting of underground ant nests into scientific art at its best, and takes us through the adventures and scientific thinking behind his detailed study of the nests of seed-eating ants in the sandy soil of northern Florida."
– Deborah M. Gordon, author of Ant Encounters

"This engagingly written book provides an excellent, comprehensive look at one of the key features of all highly evolved social insects – the elaborate construction of their nests. This is masterful science presented with striking clarity, charm, and wit."
– Bert Hölldobler, coauthor of The Superorganism: The Beauty, Elegance, and Strangeness of Insect Societies

"This enjoyable book provides the most detailed and accessible account of the belowground world of ants and the ingenious ways that scientists study them."
– Scott Solomon, author of Future Humans: Inside the Science of Our Continuing Evolution

Current promotions
New and Forthcoming BooksBritish Wildlife Magazine SubscriptionNHBS Moth TrapBuyers Guides