Saharan silver ant | |
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Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Class: | Insecta |
Order: | Hymenoptera |
Suborder: | Apocrita |
Superfamily: | Vespoidea |
Family: | Formicidae |
Genus: | Cataglyphis |
Species: | C. bombycina |
Binomial name | |
Cataglyphis bombycina Roger, 1859 |
The Saharan silver ant (Cataglyphis bombycina) is a type of ant that lives in the Sahara Desert.
Due to the extreme high temperatures of their habitat and the threat of predators, the ants are active outside their nest for only a few minutes per day.[1] The twin pressures of predation and temperature restrict the above-ground activity to a narrow temperature band between that at which the predatory lizard ceases activity and the ant's own upper threshold.[2]
The ants often traverse mid-day temperatures above 115°F (46°C) to scavenge corpses of heat-stricken animals.[3] To cope with such high temperatures, the ant has several unique adaptations.
They have longer legs than other ants. This keeps their body away from the hot sand,[2] and when traveling at full speed, they use only four of their six legs. This quadrupedal gait is achieved by raising the front pair of legs.[4]
Keeping track of the position of the sun, the ants navigate always know the direct route back to their nest, and thus can minimize their time spent in the heat.[5] They produce heat shock proteins, but unlike other animals they do this not in direct response to heat. Instead they do this before leaving the nest, because they simply are not out in the heat long enough for the proteins to take effect. This protein allows cellular functions to continue even at very high body temperatures. If they did not produce the proteins in anticipation of the extreme heat, they would die before the proteins could have its effect.
In the words of one researcher, the production of this protein "does not reflect an acute response to cellular injury or protein denaturation, but appears to be an adaptive response allowing the organism to perform work at elevated temperatures during temperature changes too abrupt to give the animal an opportunity to benefit from de novo HSP synthesis,"[6] further "the few minutes duration of the foraging frenzy is too short for synthesis of these protective proteins after exposure to heat."[2] This and other adaptations led to the ant being be called "one of the most heat-resistant animals known."[6] Its critical thermal maximum is 128.5°F (53.6°C)[7]