Neha Patil (Editor)

Myrmecia desertorum

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Class
  
Insecta

Family
  
Formicidae

Scientific name
  
Myrmecia desertorum

Phylum
  
Arthropoda

Order
  
Hymenoptera

Subfamily
  
Myrmeciinae

Rank
  
Species

Myrmecia desertorum httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Similar
  
Myrmecia mandibularis, Myrmecia chrysogaster, Myrmecia fulvipes, Myrmecia esuriens

Myrmecia desertorum


Myrmecia desertorum is an Australian ant species belonging to the Myrmecia genus. They were first described by Wheeler in 1915, and are distributed all over Australia.

Contents

Myrmecia desertorum are common nationwide. They are typically 18-26 millimetres long. They are usually a reddish yellow colour. Their heads and gaster are in a blackish brown colour, and mandibles and clypeus are of a yellow colour.

Myrmecia desertorum mandibularis pavida


Behavior

Myrmecia desertorum are highly aggressive ants. They are nocturnal and blend easily into a background of dry leaf-litter. They do not lay pheromone trails for foraging and are solitary foragers. They establish permanent nests which resemble huge crater-like depressions, with several nest openings. A unintentional poke into any of these openings results in a surge of workers running out with mandibles wide open. They have extraordinarily large eyes. They primarily feed on insects. It was in these ants that an antibiotic in the metapleural gland was discovered.

References

Myrmecia desertorum Wikipedia