Invasive yellow crazy ants create male ‘chimeras’ to reproduce

This unusual reproduction method may help these ants rapidly spread

A close up photo of three yellow crazy ants on a bright white background.

In yellow crazy ants, female workers (one shown at left) and males (two on right) are produced by combining sex cells from two distinct genetic lineages. But the DNA-filled nuclei don’t merge in males, meaning they carry two types of cells with distinct genetic material, or genomes.

© Hugo Darras

Yellow crazy ants break the rules of reproduction.