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  • RESEARCH HIGHLIGHT

Ants shrink their brains for motherhood — but can enlarge them when egg-laying ends

Jumping ant guarding pupae and larvae at the nest

The brain of an Indian jumping worker ant (above, guarding pupae and larvae) becomes smaller if she starts to lay eggs but can regrow to its old size if she stops reproducing. Credit: Martin Dohrn/Nature Picture Library

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Nature 592, 490 (2021)

doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-021-00992-2

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