Cerapachys biroi

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Clonal raider ant
Pinned Cerapachys biroi worker
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hymenoptera
Family: Formicidae
Subfamily: Cerapachyinae
Tribe: Cerapachyini
Genus: Cerapachys
Species: C. biroi
Binomial name
Cerapachys biroi
(Forel, 1907)

Cerapachys biroi, or the clonal raider ant, is a queenless clonal ant in the genus Cerapachys. Native to the Asian mainland, this species has become invasive on tropical and subtropical islands throughout the world.[1] Unlike most ants, which have reproductive queens and mostly non-reproductive workers, all individuals in a C. biroi colony reproduce clonally via thelytokous parthenogenesis.[2][3] Like most cerapachyines, C. biroi are obligate myrmecophages and raid nests of other ant species to feed on the brood.[2][4]

Description

Clonal raider ants are small, ~2mm, but relatively stocky. Like many cerapachyines, C. biroi are heavily armored, with the short, thick antennae which give the genus its name (from Greek, keras/κέρας, meaning horn and pachys/παχυς, meaning thick). The other defining characteristic of the Cerapachyinae, a row of teeth over the pygidium (last visible abdominal segment), is very small in C. biroi and difficult to see. C. biroi can be distinguished from many other cerapachyines by the combination of highly-reduced or non-existent eyes, rectangular head, and distinct post-petiole.[5]

Cyclic life history

Like many myrmecophagous ants, C. biroi exhibit synchronized oviposition and cyclic behavior, shifting between a reproductive phase and a foraging phase.[6][7] The reproductive phase begins when a cohort of larvae pupate and all the adults in the colony activate their ovaries. Thelytokously produced eggs are then laid synchronously after about four days and develop for roughly 10 days while the adults remain within the nest, cleaning and tending the eggs and pupae. Eggs hatch roughly two weeks into the reproductive phase, and then a few days later the foraging phase begins with emergence of new adults from the pupae. Adults will forage for the next two weeks, raiding the nests of other ant species to bring back food for the larvae. The cycle completes with the pupation of the new larval cohort and the resumption of the reproductive phase.[7]

References

  1. J. K. Wetterer, D. J. C. Kronauer, M. L. Borowiec (2012). "Worldwide spread of Cerapachys biroi (Hymenoptera: Formicidae: Cerapachyinae". Mymecological News 17: 1–4. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 K. Tsuji and K. Yamauchi (1995). "Production of female by parthenogenesis in the ant, Cerapachys biroi". Insectes Sociaux 42: 333–336. 
  3. F. Ravary and P Jaisson (2004). "Absence of individual sterility in thelytokous colonies of the ant Cerapachys biroi Forel (Formicidae, Cerapachyinae)". Insectes Sociaux 51: 67–73. 
  4. Hölldobler, Bert; Wilson, Edward O. (1990). The Ants. Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-04075-9. 
  5. antweb.org
  6. D.J.C. Kronauer (2009). "Recent advances in army ant biology (Hymenoptera: Formicidae)". Myrmecological News 12: 51–55. 
  7. 7.0 7.1 F. Ravary and P. Jaisson (2002). "The reproductive cycle of thelytokous colonies of Cerapachys biroi Forel (Formicidae, Cerapachyinae)". Insectes Sociaux 49: 114–119. 

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