11/02/2026
A beautiful photo by .
Thanks for sharing this John.
Sure to be extend your sport by visiting this beautiful gallery and photographer.
🧬 Frozen in Death: A Fungus-Killed Carpenter Ant 🐜🍄
A carpenter ant (Camponotus sp.) killed by an entomopathogenic fungus, most likely Beauveria bassiana, also known as white muscardine fungus.
The ant appears unnaturally still, as if frozen in time. Unlike famous “zombie-ant” fungi that force insects to climb plants and lock their jaws before dying, this fungus kills its host without complex mind control—a pattern commonly seen in northern Europe, where the fungus exists mainly in its asexual (anamorphic) stage.
After death, the fungus emerges through the ant’s joints and softer body parts, forming the white, cotton-like growth visible on the legs and body. In tropical regions, the same species can enter its sexual stage, producing fruiting bodies from the host’s head—there it is known as Cordyceps bassiana.
The genus Cordyceps became famous through The Last of Us, but in reality, these fungi are natural regulators of insect populations and pose no threat to humans.
Nature doesn’t always need drama—sometimes it works quietly, efficiently, and invisibly.
NatureIsMetal
Camponotus Entomology HiddenNature