Ammon News - Kenyan ant expert Dino Martins gushes over the red and black insects that have become the center of an international smuggling trade.
Martins has been visiting the network of nests of these Giant African Harvester Ants outside Nairobi for 40 years.
“They're big and bold... They're the tigers of the ant world,” the entomologist told AFP.
“Each nest here has just one queen and she is the mother who founded this nest 40, 50 or even 60 years ago,” he said.
Martins was shocked when he learned that thousands of queens from this Messor cephalotes species were being harvested and shipped abroad in syringes and test tubes to be sold for hundreds of dollars each.
The trade came to light in Kenya last year when two Belgian teenagers were arrested in possession of nearly 5,000 queen ants, and accused of “biopiracy.”
Kenyan authorities fear a new form of poaching, focused less on ivory and furs, and more on insects, reptiles and rare plants.
The judge even compared it to the slave trade.
“Imagine being violently removed from your home and packed into a container with many others like you... It almost sounds as if the reference above is to the slave trade,” he said in his ruling.
The Belgians were handed a fine of around $8,000, but as more cases have emerged, sentences have hardened: last month a Chinese national was sentenced to one year in prison for attempting to traffic 2,000 ants.
On several European websites, the queens go for around 200 euros ($230).
Colonies can take 20-30 years to produce new queens. They provide all manner of services to the ecosystem: dispersing grass seeds, aerating the soil, and providing food for animals like pangolins.
Martins also considers the smuggling trade unethical simply because “ants have feelings.”
The trade “exploded” with the arrival of the internet, said Jerome Gippet, a researcher at the Swiss University of Fribourg.
Formerly the interest of a few passionate individuals, it eventually gave way to sophisticated networks of collectors, intermediaries and smugglers.
A study Gippet published in 2017 found more than 500 ant species a third of the total were sold online. More than 10% were potentially invasive with uncertain impacts on foreign ecosystems.
“I'm not advocating for a ban on the ant trade. It's very useful in educational terms, in terms of reconnecting with nature, or simply providing enjoyment... But it has to be done responsibly,” he said.