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

Pheidole darlingtoni

Non-Parasitic Queen No Gamergate
Sci. Name
Pheidole darlingtoni
Tribe
Attini
Subfamily
Myrmicinae
Author
Wheeler, 1936
Distribution
Found in 1 countries
AI Identifiable
try →

Introduction

Pheidole darlingtoni is one of the most poorly known ant species in the world, documented only from a handful of minor worker specimens collected in the 1930s from southwestern Haiti. Only the minor caste has ever been found – their full body size is not recorded, but they are very small ants with a distinctive bicolored pattern: mostly pale whitish-yellow with light brown markings on the postpetiole, gaster, parts of the head, and scapes . The species was named after the coleopterist Philip J. Darlington, who collected the type specimens from the Massif de la Hotte mountain range at an elevation of 61–122 meters . No queens or major workers have ever been documented; nothing is known about its colony structure, founding behavior, or basic biology. This makes *P. darlingtoni* perhaps the least understood *Pheidole* species, and it may already be extinct due to extensive habitat loss in Haiti.

Loading distribution map...

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

Native Invasive Introduced (indoor) Intercepted Unknown
2000 - 2026

Quick Summary

  • Difficulty: Unknown
  • Origin & Habitat: Endemic to the Massif de la Hotte mountain range in southwestern Haiti, at low elevations of 61–122 meters [1][2]. Only known from minor worker type specimens collected in the 1930s.
  • Colony Type: Unknown – only minor workers have ever been documented. The colony structure (single queen vs multiple queens) is completely unconfirmed.
  • Size & Growth:
    • Queen: Unknown – queens have never been documented [1][2]
    • Worker: Size data unavailable – only minor workers known, total length not recorded. Head-only measurements exist but do not represent body size.
    • Colony: Unknown – only a handful of specimens have ever been collected
    • Growth: Unknown
    • Development: Unknown – no breeding or development has ever been documented (This species is known only from dead museum specimens. No live colonies have ever been observed or studied.)
  • Antkeeping:
    • Temperature: Unknown for this species. Based on typical Caribbean lowland *Pheidole* preferences, you might try around 24–28°C, but this is entirely speculative. Start in the mid-20s and monitor.
    • Humidity: Unknown. The Massif de la Hotte region is relatively dry for Haiti. Offer a moisture gradient with one dry area and one slightly moist area, and let the ants choose. Moderate humidity is a reasonable guess.
    • Diapause: Unknown – likely minimal if any given the tropical location of Haiti, but no data exists. Observe colony behavior rather than forcing dormancy.
    • Nesting: Unknown. Based on typical *Pheidole* genus patterns, they likely nest in soil or rotting wood. A standard test tube setup is a reasonable starting point.
  • Behavior: Completely unknown. *Pheidole* as a genus is known for having two worker castes (minors and majors), but only minors have ever been documented for this species. Defensive responses, foraging patterns, and aggression levels are all unconfirmed. Like other members of the subfamily Myrmicinae (tribe Attini), it possesses a stinger, though it is not considered medically significant. Given the tiny size of minors, excellent escape prevention is essential regardless of behavior.
  • Common Issues: this species has never been kept in captivity – there is no established care protocol, the entire species may be extinct in the wild due to extensive deforestation in Haiti, no one has documented what these ants eat, how they found colonies, or any aspect of their living biology, attempting to keep this species would be entirely experimental with no guidance available, the lack of documented queens means captive breeding may be impossible if the species is lost

A Note on This Species

Pheidole darlingtoni represents an extraordinary case in ant keeping – it is one of the few ant species on Earth where literally nothing is known about the living biology. The entire scientific knowledge base consists of several minor worker specimens collected in the 1930s by Philip J. Darlington, preserved in museum collections. No queens, no majors, no live colonies, no observations of behavior, feeding, nesting, or reproduction have ever been documented. This species may already be extinct in the wild – Haiti has lost most of its forest cover since the 1930s, and the Massif de la Hotte where these ants were found has been heavily degraded. If you are considering keeping this species, you must understand that there is absolutely no established care protocol, no breeding guidance, and no way to verify if you actually have P. darlingtoni since only minor workers were ever described. This would be an entirely experimental endeavor with no safety net. [1][2]

What We Know (And Don't Know)

The scientific literature on Pheidole darlingtoni is limited to three papers: the original description by Wheeler in 1936,a redescription by E.O. Wilson in 2003,and a comprehensive treatment of Hispaniolan ants by David Lubertazzi in 2019. All three confirm the same thing – this species is known only from minor workers, never from queens or majors. The coloration is distinctive among Caribbean Pheidole – pale whitish-yellow with light brown markings on the postpetiole, gaster, and portions of the head. Beyond these morphological details, absolutely nothing has been documented about their biology, including what they eat, where they nest, how colonies are founded, or whether they have one queen or multiple queens. [1][2]

Inferred Care Guidelines (Speculative)

Since direct care information does not exist for this species, any guidance must be inferred from typical Pheidole genus patterns. Pheidole generally are granivorous (seed-eating) and also tend small insects and honeydew. They typically form colonies with one queen (monogyne) but some species can have multiple queens. Founding is usually claustral – the queen seals herself in and lives off stored fat until her first workers emerge. Given the Haitian location at 61–122m elevation, these ants likely experience warm temperatures year-round with moderate humidity. However, every piece of this inferred guidance could be wrong for P. darlingtoni specifically. If you attempt to keep this species, document everything meticulously – your observations could represent the first biological data ever recorded.

The Conservation Reality

Pheidole darlingtoni faces a grim outlook. The species was described from specimens collected in the 1930s from the Massif de la Hotte in southwestern Haiti – one of the most heavily deforested regions in the Caribbean. Haiti has lost approximately 99% of its original forest cover, and the mountains where this species was found have been extensively converted to agriculture and charcoal production. It is entirely possible that Pheidole darlingtoni is already extinct. The species may turn up in the Dominican Republic if mountain habitats there are better surveyed (Wilson 2003), but no specimens have been found there to date. For ant keepers, this raises serious ethical questions – if the species survives only in captivity, does it have a future? And if no live specimens have ever been documented, how would you verify you actually have this species? [1][2]

Frequently Asked Questions

Has Pheidole darlingtoni ever been kept in captivity?

No – there are no documented cases of this species ever being kept in captivity. The entire global knowledge of this species consists of minor worker specimens in museum collections. No live colonies have ever been observed or studied.

What do Pheidole darlingtoni ants eat?

Unknown – this has never been documented. Based on typical Pheidole genus behavior, they likely eat seeds, small insects, and honeydew, but this is purely speculative for this specific species.

How do I identify Pheidole darlingtoni?

You cannot reliably identify this species because only minor workers were ever described. Without queens or majors to compare, and with no live specimens ever documented, there is no way to verify if ants you find are this species. The original description only covers the minor worker caste.

Are Pheidole darlingtoni ants extinct?

Unknown – the species has not been observed since the 1930s, and Haiti has lost most of its forest cover since then. It may be extinct, or it may survive in unexplored areas of the Massif de la Hotte or possibly the Dominican Republic.

What is the colony structure of Pheidole darlingtoni?

Unknown – no queens have ever been documented for this species. We do not know if they are single-queen (monogyne) or multi-queen (polygyne) colonies. The colony structure is completely unconfirmed.

Do Pheidole darlingtoni have major workers?

Unknown – only minor workers have ever been documented. Pheidole species typically have both minor and major (soldier) castes, but no majors have ever been collected or described for P. darlingtoni.

Where does Pheidole darlingtoni live?

The species is known only from the Massif de la Hotte in southwestern Haiti, at elevations of 61–122 meters. It may also exist in the Dominican Republic if mountain habitats there are better surveyed.

Can I keep Pheidole darlingtoni as a pet ant?

This would be entirely experimental and likely not feasible. No live specimens have ever been documented, there is no established care protocol, and you would have no way to verify you actually have this species. Additionally, the species may already be extinct in the wild.

What temperature and humidity do Pheidole darlingtoni need?

Unknown – no living ant has ever been studied. Based on the Haitian lowland location, they likely prefer warm temperatures (24–28°C) with moderate humidity, but this is purely inferred from location, not from any biological study.

Why is so little known about this ant species?

Pheidole darlingtoni is known only from type specimens collected in the 1930s. No researcher has ever documented live colonies, observed their behavior, or studied their biology. Haiti has also experienced extensive habitat loss since the specimens were collected, making rediscovery extremely unlikely.

Report an Issue

The current care sheet is based fully on literature. See inconsistencies, or something that's incorrect? Please , it will be resolved after review from an admin. Contributing to the blogs tab also helps providing information, to make us be able to further improve the caresheets. Thank you for your support!

References

Creative Commons License

This caresheet is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0 .