var arrayFacts=[

"<b>Jumping Jacks:</b><br><br>The large, aggressive Australian bulldog ant is also called the jack-jumper.<br><br>In warmer areas there may be as many as 150 species of ants per hectare but, even in the colder regions of Australia, there are likely to be 75 species of ants per hectare.",

"<b>Soil Savior:</b><br><br>Like earthworms, bulldog ants help to improve soil conditions by opening the soil as they excavate their nests.",

"<b>Anci-ANT:</b><br><br>Bulldog ants are one of the most ancient species of ant in the world. Their closest relatives are species found only in fossils! ",

"<b>House Proud:</b><br><br>The nest of a bulldog ant may measure up to three feet across.  Bulldog ants construct large nest mounds, which are often decorated with stones and plant material.<br><br>A typical nest has a series of irregular galleries connected with passages, and multiple entrance holes.",

"<b>Type A Ant:</b><br><br>Bulldog ants play an important role in keeping the forest floor clean.<br><br>By collecting and eating other sick or dead insects, they clear away decay and debris.",

"<b>Lifting Lunch:</b><br><br>Bulldog ants can carry over 100 times their own weight. This strength is very helpful when collecting food to take back to the nest.<br><br>Their diet includes small insects, honeydew (a sweet liquid from insects), seeds, fruit, fungi and nectar.  They gather food from the area surrounding their nest and will also climb tall trees to gather food.",

"<b>Bulldog Ant Table Manners:</b><br><br>When bulldog ants return to the nest, they throw up a liquid to feed larvae and other ants.<br><br>They also store food in chambers in their nests for future use, just like a pantry. ",

"<b>Ant Farmers:</b><br><br>Bulldog ants have their own dairies. They harvest honeydew (a sweet liquid) from sap-sucking insects, just as humans milk cows.<br><br>While the aggressive-looking bulldog ants only eat nectar and honeydew, the larval ants eat insects brought back to the nest by adults.",

"<b>Ant-idote:</b><br><br>The venom of the bulldog ant has a 3 percent chance of inducing an anaphylactic shock.<br><br>They are well known for their aggressive natures and powerful stings, and, until the introduction of a vaccine, their stings could be lethal.<br><br>A sting been described as feeling like a ‘hot needle piercing the flesh.’ ",

"<b>Just the Facts:</b><br><br>Bulldog Ants have large bodies, elongated mandibles, and large eyes.<br><br>They get their name from their habit of gripping something with their strong mandibles and hanging on to it.<br><br>They have superior vision and are able to track and follow intruders from a distance of over three feet."];
