For the scientifically-minded, termites are eusocial animals of the Class Insecta; Subclass Pterygota; Infraclass Neoptera; Superorder Dictyoptera and Order Isoptera. They are not related to ants in any way, although some people refer to them as white ants. Having said, that termites do share a few traits with ants: firstly, work is divided along lines of gender and secondly, the ruler of the colony is the termite queen.
A typical, mature colony will contain between several hundred and several million insects of the following kinds: nymphs (semi-mature young), workers, soldiers, and reproductive individuals of both sexes and at least one reproductive queen.
The reproductive caste, also referred to as the winged or alate caste, are usually the only termites with quite well-developed eyes although in some species there are sporadically soldiers with eyes as well. Termites that are suitable to become alates will undergo an incomplete metamorphosis.
These changelings form a sub-caste in certain species of termites, functioning both as both workers, pseudergates, and also as latent replacement reproductive termite. These back-up alates can be brought on to replace dead primary reproductives and sometimes, in some species, replacement alates are brought on if a primary queen is killed.
In countries with distinct dry and rainy or monsoon seasons, like the tropics, the alates can be observed flying up from the earth in swarms that look like white ribbons blowing in a breeze, immediately after a dry spell is broken by rain. These alates have three pairs of wings, but they are not good at flying.
They can be seen in their thousands circling street lights like moths, where people catch them to eat. Lightly fried in their own fat, without the wings, they are said to be, juicy, nutty and full of protein. Quite delicious, in fact. Frogs and toads sit under the street lamps impatiently awaiting a succulent meal too.
A queen is a former winged reproductive termite (of the Winged or Alate Caste. She will have flown away from her nest or nest of birth, dropped to the ground, shed her wings, mated and then crawled into the nearest hole in the soil (depending on her species) to found a new colony or nest. In some species, the queen adds an extra set of ovaries with each molt of her skin and can produce 2,000 eggs a day.
A male that has flown and mated with the queen is known as a king. Sometimes, these kings stay near by the queen, but sometimes they do not. At the next molt, the king will be a little bigger that he was at first. However, the king and the queen are not monogamous. Several males might mate with the queen and there may be several queens within a nest.
As the queen molts and grows bigger with each molt, her abdomen can become hundreds of times its original size, although her head and legs remain the same as normal. Obviously, at this size she can no longer walk as her legs do not reach the ground and would not bear her weight anyway. At this point, she is completely reliant on the attendance of worker termites, which she controls with pheromones.
Owen Jones, the writer of this article, writes on many subjects, but is at present concerned with types of termites. If you are interested in this or if you are wondering: What Does A Termite Look Like?. Please go to our web site now for further details.