The Life and Strange Surprizing Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, of York, Mariner • Paragraph 1532
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The Imbauba tree (_Cecropia spp._) also possesses a standing army of these ants. It puts them up in the hollow pith in the centre of the tree, which is divided into large roomy spaces and makes a convenient nest. There is a minute opening by which they run in and out. On one occasion a naturalist found that the ants had been benumbed by a period of very cold weather, and in consequence had neglected their duty, and the trees had been stripped of their leaves by leaf-cutting kinds.[130]