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carton nest (s) (noun), carton nests (pl)
A lodging created by ants: Ants transform large cavities in the soil and tree trunks by filling them with carton nests whose internal structure is partitioned and resembles a sponge. A carton nest consists of a cardboard-like substance made up of chewed plant material often mixed with soil, and made by certain insects for building nests.

The ant carton consists of particles of wood, dry vegetable material, and soil glued together with sugary secretions collected by the ants from aphids and other homopteran insects (bugs that pierce plant tissues and suck out the sap).

The fungal mycelium (loose network of delicate filaments hyphae or threadlike filaments that form the body of a fungus) grows through the walls of the carton which are strengthened by the symbiotic fungus which reinforces them in the same way that steel mesh or rods reinforce the walls of buildings.


—Compiled excerpts located in the section
"Ant-Fungus Symbioses" from The Ants by Bert Holldobler and Edward O. Wilson;
The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press;
Cambridge, Massachusetts; 1990; page 607.
This entry is located in the following unit: Ant and Related Entomology Terms (page 5)