⚠️ VISITOR UPDATE - 11 January 2026 – DAYTIME ZOO CLOSED ⚠️

With the continued cold temperatures, despite our teams best efforts to prepare the zoo to open this morning, the icy conditions on the ground mean we will not be able to open the zoo to you all this morning, to ensure the safety of you and our teams ❄️

☕️ Our indoor Himalaya visitor centre, including Soft Play, Costa Coffee and The View restaurant will open as normal for visitors to enjoy

🌟 As temperatures are looking to warm through the day, we plan to reopen this evening for Lanterns of the Wild. Our team are working hard getting ready to welcome you all, but we will update you all should this change

🚗 Please only travel this evening, if it is safe to do so from your home. If you're unable to visit, we are happy to reschedule your tickets on another available date at no additional cost. Please check your emails over the next couple of hours for full instructions of how to do this.

Annual Ticket holders: Reschedule daytime visits by logging into our website and booking a repeat visit.

Twycross Zoo Leaf Cutter Ant

Leaf-Cutter Ant

There are 24 known species of leaf-cutter ant. A. octospinosus is the species kept at Twycross Zoo. They are pale brown with a thorny appearance and four pairs of spines on their backs.

This subspecies live in ant colonies that can contain 50,000 individuals, made up of mostly infertile female workers. The colony takes 18 months to mature and is separated into castes (which determine their jobs). There are usually four castes, minims (working inside the colony), minors and mediae (collecting the leaves) and majors (soldiers). The caste an ant belongs to is dependant on their body size.

Twycross Zoo Leaf Cutter Ant

Each colony is founded by the queen ant, a winged female that will have left her previous colony. She will mate in the air with several males, storing the semen for the rest of her life. She then sheds her wings and digs a burrow. The queen will keep herself sustained until the colony establishes itself by cultivating a small fungus garden and laying infertile eggs as food.

Twycross Zoo Leaf Cutter Ant

The leaf-cutter ants diet is unique. They do not eat leaves but cultivate them in a garden to grow a particular species of fungus. The mycelia (root-like structures) of this fungus are their diet. The ants also create multiple antibiotics to prevent the growth of unwanted fungus and will use these antibiotics in a similar way to humans to treat infections.

This abundant species is listed as Not Evaluated by IUCN. They have no known threats.

Key Facts:

 

Conservation Status: Not Evaluated

Distribution: Brazil, Mexico

Habitat: Coniferous & Broadleaf Forests, Tropical Forest

No. of young: 500 – 600

Twycross Zoo Sumatran Tiger Stretching

SUPPORT OUR ANIMALS

If you're looking for an alternative way to donate to Twycross Zoo, you can help support our animals and our zoo keepers by purchasing something from our Amazon Wishlist!

Updated regularly by our zoo keepers, the items on the list help to provide enrichment for our animals and keep their habitats well maintained.

Every donation helps us as a conservation charity.

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