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Question
- how does the infected ant act during the incubation period?
- how does the zombie - ant fungus control its host’s mind?
For question 6: During the incubation period, the infected ant behaves normally at first, carrying out its usual colony tasks like foraging, grooming, and interacting with nestmates, as the fungus grows and spreads internally without yet overtly altering its behavior.
For question 7: The zombie-ant fungus does not directly "control the mind" in a neurological sense. Instead, it grows through the ant's body, invades muscle tissue, and releases chemical compounds that hijack the ant's motor functions, forcing it to move to a location ideal for fungal spore dispersal, then lock its jaws onto a surface before the fungus kills it and grows a spore-releasing structure from its head.
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- During the incubation period, the infected ant initially behaves normally, performing its typical colony duties (foraging, grooming, nest interactions) as the fungus develops internally without causing obvious behavioral changes.
- The zombie-ant fungus does not directly control the ant's mind; it invades the ant's body, grows through muscle tissue, and secretes chemical compounds that hijack the ant's motor functions, forcing it to move to a spore-friendly location, clamp its jaws to a surface, and then the fungus kills the ant to grow a spore-dispersing structure from its head.