Solenopsis daguerri
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Solenopsis daguerri |
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Solenopsis daguerri Santschi |
Solenopsis daguerri is a species of parasitic ants native to South America. The young queens of the species invade the nests of other species, such as the Red imported fire ant (RIFA) (Solenopsis invicta). This is made possible by the fact that the S. daguerri queen produces pheromones which are very similar to those produced by the queens of the host species. The young queen finds a queen of the host species and latches onto it, eating the food intended for the host queen and slowly killing it. The S. daguerri queen then begins laying eggs. These are taken care of by the host ants, sometimes preferentially to their own brood. S. daguerri only produce winged virgin queens and males. No workers are needed, since these are provided by the host species. The winged ants fly off to mate and invade new colonies.
S. daguerri is being considered as a potential biological control agent for RIFA, which is an invasive species in many parts of the world. As of 2006, work is underway to find methods of rearing the ants in sufficient numbers to be released into the wild to reduce RIFA populations. In their native South America about 1-4 % of the RIFA colonies are infested with S. daguerri. Another species being investigated for the same reason is Solenopsis ricteri.
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[edit] Sources
- An article at the website of the University of Texas, accessed November 20, 2006