Scientific illustration of Mayaponera longidentata ant - showing key identification features including head, thorax, and gaster.

Mayaponera longidentata

Non-Parasitic Queen No Gamergate
Sci. Name
Mayaponera longidentata
Tribe
Ponerini
Subfamily
Ponerinae
Author
MacKay & MacKay, 2010
Distribution
Found in 0 countries

Introduction

Mayaponera longidentata is a small ferrugineous red ant with workers measuring 6.5 mm in total length . The species is recognizable by its extremely long apical mandibular tooth, which is approximately three times longer than any other tooth . Workers have tiny eyes, short antennae, and a thick petiole with abundant short erect hairs across the body . The species is known only from the type locality in Parque Nacional Natural La Macarena, Meta, Colombia, at 580 meters elevation . Taxonomically, it shows characteristics linking the ferruginea and arhuaca species complexes, making its exact placement uncertain .

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Status by country, from Kass et al. 2022 & Wong et al. 2023

Native Invasive Introduced (indoor) Intercepted Unknown
2000 - 2026

Quick Summary

  • Difficulty: Expert
  • Origin & Habitat: Sierra La Macarena, Meta, Colombia at 580m elevation [2]. The type locality is Parque Nacional Natural La Macarena, a protected national park [1]. The region is tropical lowland forest.
  • Colony Type: Unconfirmed, only the worker caste has been described [1].
  • Size & Growth:
    • Queen: Unknown, queen caste undescribed [1].
    • Worker: ~6.5 mm [1].
    • Colony: Unknown [1].
    • Growth: Unknown.
    • Development: Unknown. (No development data exists for this species.)
  • Antkeeping:
    • Temperature: Estimated 22-26°C based on tropical lowland origin. Start in this range and adjust based on activity levels.
    • Humidity: High humidity likely needed, keep substrate consistently moist but not waterlogged.
    • Diapause: Likely not required, Colombian lowlands have stable warm temperatures year-round.
    • Nesting: Unknown natural nesting behavior. Y-tong or plaster nests with good moisture retention would be appropriate trial setups.
  • Behavior: Behavior is unstudied. Based on Ponerinae subfamily traits, likely predatory on small invertebrates and capable of stinging. Escape risk is moderate given 6.5mm worker size.
  • Common Issues: completely unknown biology means all care is experimental., no established husbandry guidelines exist, you must develop care through trial and error., only the worker caste is known, queens remain undescribed., the type locality lies within a protected national park, making collection illegal without permits., temperature and humidity requirements are unstudied estimates.

Why This Species Is Challenging

Mayaponera longidentata is one of the least-known ants in the hobby. Nothing has been published about its biology beyond the original species description [1]. We do not know what it eats, how it nests, or whether it has one queen or many. The only specimens ever collected are workers from a single protected area in Colombia [2]. Keeping this species would require pioneering captive husbandry with no guidance. Any successful care would contribute new knowledge to antkeeping.

Taxonomy and Identification

This species has changed classification multiple times. Mackay and Mackay described it as Mayaponera longidentata in 2010,Schmidt and Shattuck transferred it to Rasopone in 2014,and Longino and Branstetter moved it to Mayaponera in 2020 [3][1]. It currently belongs to the arhuaca complex within Mayaponera [3]. Workers are small reddish ants with a distinctive mandible: the apical tooth is extremely long, about three times the length of the next longest tooth [1]. The clypeus forms a sharp angle but does not extend into a spine, and the transverse clypeal carina is nearly absent [1]. The subpetiolar process lacks a posteriorly directed flange or lobe [1]. You can separate this species from similar Rasopone ferruginea and Rasopone lunaris by four traits: the apical mandibular tooth is much longer (only slightly longer in the other two), the mandibles are smooth with scattered punctures (striate in the others), the eyes are tiny with maximum diameter less than 0.1 mm (larger in the others), and the subpetiolar process lacks a posterior flange (present in the others) [1].

Natural History

The natural history of Mayaponera longidentata is completely unknown. We know only that workers were collected in July 1991 at 580m elevation in Parque Nacional Natural La Macarena, Meta, Colombia [2][1]. The region is tropical lowland forest. No data exists on nesting habits, diet, colony size, or reproductive behavior [1].

Estimated Care Approach

Without direct care information, you must make educated guesses based on the collection data and related Ponerinae ants. The Colombian tropical origin suggests temperatures around 22-26°C with high humidity. As a Ponerine ant, it likely needs protein-rich food like small live prey. Start with a test tube setup with moist cotton for humidity. Watch for stress signs: workers clustering together may indicate low humidity, while avoiding the moist area suggests too much moisture. Adjust slowly and document everything. Success requires patience and careful observation.

Obtaining This Species

This species is unavailable in the antkeeping hobby. It is known only from the holotype worker collected in Parque Nacional Natural La Macarena, a protected national park in Colombia [2][1]. No colonies have been exported or established in captivity. The queen caste has never been described, making founding impossible without fresh collection from the type locality. Collection within national parks requires permits and is restricted. This caresheet documents what little we know rather than providing practical keeping advice.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Mayaponera longidentata available in the antkeeping hobby?

No. This species is known only from a single collection in a protected national park in Colombia and has never been established in captivity [2][1].

What do Mayaponera longidentata ants eat?

Unknown. As a member of the subfamily Ponerinae, it likely preys on small invertebrates, but no feeding observations exist [1].

How do I keep Mayaponera longidentata?

No established care protocol exists. You would need to experiment based on related ants. Estimated requirements: 22-26°C and high humidity. This is expert-only.

Do Mayaponera longidentata ants sting?

Likely yes. Ponerinae ants typically possess functional stingers.

How big do Mayaponera longidentata colonies get?

Unknown. No colonies have been studied [1].

What is the egg to worker development time for Mayaponera longidentata?

Unknown. No development data exists [1].

Is Mayaponera longidentata a good species for beginners?

No. This is an expert-only species with unknown biology and no care guidelines [1].

Where does Mayaponera longidentata live?

Only known from Sierra La Macarena in Meta, Colombia, at 580m elevation [2][1].

Do Mayaponera longidentata queens need hibernation?

Likely not required given the tropical Colombian origin.

Can I keep multiple Mayaponera longidentata queens together?

Unknown. Colony structure has never been studied [1].

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References

Creative Commons License

This caresheet is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0 .