Pheidole pallidula exhibits a clear seasonal flight window. Peak flight activity is concentrated in June, with the overall period spanning May to July.
Pallid Big-headed Ant
Pheidole pallidula
- Sci. Name
- Pheidole pallidula
- Tribe
- Attini
- Subfamily
- Myrmicinae
- Author
- Nylander, 1849
- Common Name
- Pallid Big-headed Ant
- Distribution
- Found in 12 countries
- Nuptial Flight
- From May to July
- Peak flight Time
- 20:00
Introduction
Pheidole pallidula is a dimorphic ant species native to the Mediterranean region, with minor workers measuring 1.6-2.6 mm and major workers (soldiers) reaching 3.3-4.9 mm in body length . It is easily recognized by its strongly polymorphic worker caste and yellowish to light chestnut brown color . Colonies can grow up to 6,000 workers . The species is widespread across Southern Europe, North Africa, and parts of Western Asia , thriving in dry, open habitats and disturbed areas. It is notable for its mass recruitment system, efficient seed dispersal role, and complex social structure with both single-queen and multi-queen colonies .
Quick Summary
- Difficulty: Easy
- Origin & Habitat: Mediterranean region, widespread across Southern Europe, North Africa, and Western Asia [4]. Prefers dry, open habitats such as grasslands, meadows, roadsides, and rocky areas, often colonizing disturbed landscapes.
- Colony Type: Facultatively polygynous, colonies can have either a single queen (monogyne) or multiple queens (polygyne), with both types occurring in the same populations [5]. Workers are strongly polymorphic with distinct minor and major castes.
- Size & Growth:
- Queen: ~7-8 mm [6]
- Worker: Minor workers: 1.6-2.6 mm, Major workers: 3.3-4.9 mm [1]
- Colony: Up to 6,000 workers [3]
- Growth: Fast
- Development: 4-5 weeks [7] (At 25-27°C, egg stage 7-10 days, larval stage 11-12 days, pupal stage 8-13 days, total 28-33 days. First workers eclose 31-35 days after mating [7].)
- Antkeeping:
- Temperature: Keep at 20-28°C, ideally around 24°C. This species is heat-intolerant and shifts activity to crepuscular and nocturnal periods in hot weather. Critical thermal maximum is around 40°C [1].
- Humidity: Low to moderate. Prefers dry conditions, keep nest substrate moderately dry with a small water reservoir. Avoid overly damp conditions to prevent mold.
- Diapause: Yes, colonies reduce activity in winter. In captivity, a cooling period at 10-15°C for 2-3 months is beneficial [8].
- Nesting: Test tubes work for founding colonies. For established colonies, use Y-tong, plaster, or other standard formicaria with shallow, dry chambers. Provide a humidity gradient.
- Behavior: Aggressive and dominant in Mediterranean communities. Workers use mass recruitment to exploit food sources quickly. Minor workers handle foraging, while majors defend the nest and process large prey. Omnivorous diet includes insects, seeds, and honeydew. Activity is crepuscular/nocturnal in summer to avoid heat. Highly aggressive toward non-nestmates, with aggression correlating with genetic distance [5].
- Common Issues: escape prevention is critical, tiny minor workers can squeeze through gaps, use fine mesh barriers, colonies can become populous quickly, ensure adequate space, heat sensitivity may cause nest abandonment, position heating carefully, aggressive toward other ant species, keep separate, foundress queens are claustral, but founding behavior is unconfirmed
Pheidole pallidula nuptial flight activity peaks around 20:00 during the evening. Activity is spread across a 24-hour window (00:00–23:00). Times may be influenced by human observation patterns.
Housing and Setup
Pheidole pallidula is easy to house in captivity. For founding, use a test tube with water reservoir, queens seal themselves in and raise first workers alone. Once colonies reach 20-30 workers, transfer to a small formicarium. Any standard nest type works, but prefer shallow chambers. Escape prevention is essential due to tiny workers, use tight-fitting lids and fine mesh. A small outworld suffices for foraging. Maintain moderate humidity with a dry area. [3][6]
Feeding and Diet
Omnivorous: feed protein (small insects like fruit flies or mealworms) 2-3 times per week, and constant sugar sources (honey water, diluted jam). They use mass recruitment to exploit food. Major workers help process large prey. Remove uneaten food to prevent mold. They may attend aphids for honeydew.
Temperature and Seasonal Care
Keep at 20-28°C, ideally 24°C. Heat-intolerant, shift activity to cooler periods in summer. Peak activity in late summer. Winter diapause at 10-15°C for 2-3 months is beneficial but not required. Avoid direct heating mats. [1][8]
Colony Structure and Castes
Dimorphic worker caste: minors (1.6-2.6 mm) forage and care for brood, majors (3.3-4.9 mm) defend and process prey. Caste ratio ~89% minors to 11% majors. Soldiers develop from larvae fed protein-rich food early. Colonies can be monogyne or polygyne. [2][7][5]
Behavior and Defense
Dominant species using mass recruitment and aggression. Lack a functional sting, defense relies on major worker bites. Workers are crepuscular/nocturnal in summer. Aggression toward non-nestmates increases with genetic distance. [5]
Reproduction and Nuptial Flights
Nuptial flights in July-August. Queens found colonies claustrally, raising first workers alone. Sex allocation varies: monogyne colonies produce more males, polygyne more females. [7]
Ecological Role
Predator of small insects and seed disperser for plants like Euphorbia species. Attends aphids for honeydew. Can be a pest in citrus orchards by protecting scale insects.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does it take for Pheidole pallidula to produce first workers?
At 25-27°C, first workers appear 31-35 days after queen begins founding. Development: egg 7-10 days, larva 11-12 days, pupa 8-13 days [7].
Can I keep multiple queens together?
This species is facultatively polygynous, but introducing unrelated queens to an established colony may cause aggression. Try combining foundress queens before egg-laying with multiple chambers [5].
What do I feed them?
Omnivorous: protein insects 2-3 times per week, constant sugar sources. They accept seeds and may tend aphids.
Are they good for beginners?
Yes, they are hardy and adaptable. Main challenges are escape prevention and providing protein for soldiers [3].
How big do colonies get?
Up to 6,000 workers in the wild [3]. In captivity, mature colonies reach several thousand workers over years.
Do they need hibernation?
In native climates, activity reduces in winter. A cooling period at 10-15°C for 2-3 months is beneficial but not required [8].
Why are soldiers dying?
Soldiers have shorter lifespans, some mortality is normal. Check for stress, disease (e.g., Myrmicinosporidium durum), poor nutrition, or excessive heat [9].
What's the difference between minor and major workers?
Minors (1.6-2.6 mm) forage and handle most tasks, majors (3.3-4.9 mm) defend and process large prey. Both work together.
When is the nuptial flight of Pheidole pallidula?
The nuptial flight of Pheidole pallidula typically occurs From May to July.
What time of day does Pheidole pallidula fly?
The nuptial flight of Pheidole pallidula peaks around 20:00 during the evening, with most activity between 00:00 and 23:00. Times may be influenced by human observation patterns.
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
This caresheet is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0 .
Community Blogs
ANTWEB1008081
View on AntWebANTWEB1008107
View on AntWebANTWEB1008108
View on AntWebANTWEB1038029
View on AntWebCASENT0080858
View on AntWebCASENT0080859
View on AntWebCASENT0080860
View on AntWebCASENT0103144
View on AntWebCASENT0106290
View on AntWebCASENT0249410
View on AntWebCASENT0249411
View on AntWebCASENT0249415
View on AntWebCASENT0249421
View on AntWebCASENT0249422
View on AntWebCASENT0282688
View on AntWebCASENT0283442
View on AntWebCASENT0283480
View on AntWebCASENT0907789
View on AntWebCASENT0907790
View on AntWebCASENT0910224
View on AntWebCASENT0913384
View on AntWebCASENT0913385
View on AntWebCASENT0913386
View on AntWebCASENT0913387
View on AntWebCASENT0913388
View on AntWebCASENT0913389
View on AntWebCASENT0913390
View on AntWebCASENT0913391
View on AntWebCASENT0916045
View on AntWebCASENT0922064
View on AntWebCASENT0922065
View on AntWebCFH000030
View on AntWebFOCOL1289
View on AntWebFOCOL1290
View on AntWebFOCOL1291
View on AntWebFOCOL1292
View on AntWebFOCOL1294
View on AntWebFOCOL1295
View on AntWebFOCOL1296
View on AntWebFOCOL1297
View on AntWebFOCOL1298
View on AntWebFOCOL1299
View on AntWebMCZ-ENT00511504-01
View on AntWebMCZ-ENT00511504-02
View on AntWebLiterature
Loading distribution map...Loading products...