Pheromone trails are like invisible messages that some animals leave behind to help others find their way.
Imagine you and your friend are playing a game where you have to follow each other through the woods. Every time you walk past, you drop a tiny invisible sticker on the ground. Your friend can see these stickers and knows exactly which path to take to catch up with you. That’s kind of how pheromone trails work, except instead of stickers, some animals leave behind very special smells, and other animals can sniff them out.
How it works
When an ant finds food, it leaves a trail of special smells as it walks back to its nest. Other ants can smell these special smells and follow the same path to find the food too, just like you following your friend’s stickers through the woods!
These trails are super helpful because they let animals work together without needing to talk or use any kind of map. They’re just using smell, something we all know from our everyday lives!
Examples
- An ant follows a line of tiny dots left by another ant.
- Ants use invisible paths like highways to move in groups.
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See also
- How Do Bees Navigate Back to Their Hive?
- Do ants or other insects sleep, and if so why?
- How do birds use special tools inside them to find their way?
- What is Position of the sun or stars?
- What are ants use tiny chemical messages?