Honey pot ants

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Honey pot ants of the genus Myrmecocystus

Honey pot ants or honey ants are species of ants that store food in their guests .

Behavior and nutrition

Most species live in arid habitats and feed on honey-like excretions from gall apples of the dwarf oak or honeydew from aphids .

If the food supply is high, the ant colony turns off workers who take in so much food that their goiters swell and their abdomen swells up like a barrel. So they hang motionless from the ceiling and look like honey pots. If there is a shortage of food, they can release the stored food again. To do this, a normal worker signals the need by rubbing the antenna of a storage ant. This then chokes out a drop of food that the other ant can take.

Systematics

The term "honey pot ants" does not refer to a specific species of ants, but is a collective term.

Examples:

Intermediate forms occur in the genera Erebomyrma , Carebara (formerly Pheidologeton ), Prenolepis and Proformica .

Use by humans

When we talk about honey pot ants, we usually mean those that are consumed by the Australian natives, the Aborigines . The ant species Camponotus inflatus is particularly preferred because it has the sweetest “honey”.

literature

Web links

Commons : Honeydew Ants  - Collection of images, videos, and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Honey Ant Adaptations. In: National Geographic. Retrieved September 6, 2016 .