Aenictus shillongensis
- Nom. sci.
- Aenictus shillongensis
- Sottofamiglia
- Dorylinae
- Autore
- Mathew & Tiwari, 2000
- Distribuzione
- Trovata in 0 paesi
Introduzione
Aenictus shillongensis is a tiny army ant species endemic to the mountains of northeastern India . Workers measure approximately 3 millimeters in total length and are reddish-brown in color . The head is smooth and polished, while the thorax has a rough, punctate-rugose texture . This species is known only from seven museum specimens collected in 1975 - no queens, males, or live colonies have ever been observed . Scientists have only described the worker caste, making this one of the least known ant species in the world.
Quick Summary
- Difficulty: Expert
- Origin & Habitat: Endemic to northeastern India, specifically Meghalaya (East Khasi Hills, Shillong) and Arunachal Pradesh [1]. Found in tropical montane forest at moderate elevations.
- Colony Type: Unknown, only worker caste described. Colony structure (single or multiple queens) has never been documented [3].
- Size & Growth:
- Antkeeping:
- Behavior: Behavior completely unstudied. Workers are tiny (~3mm) which creates high escape risk if colonies were ever discovered [2].
- Common Issues: only worker caste known, impossible to start a colony., no live colonies have ever been observed, basic biology unknown., endemic to small region, wild populations likely small., tiny size creates extreme escape risk.
Why This Species Cannot Be Kept
Aenictus shillongensis is known only from seven museum specimens collected in 1975 from a single location in Shillong, Meghalaya [2]. No scientist has ever observed a live colony. No one knows what they eat, where they nest, how they reproduce, how large their colonies grow, or anything about their basic biology [3]. Without this fundamental knowledge, captive keeping is impossible. You cannot care for an animal when nothing is known about its requirements.
What We Know From Museum Specimens
The seven known specimens were collected on July 25,1975,from Risa Colony in Shillong, India [2]. Workers are approximately 3 millimeters long and reddish-brown [2]. The head is smooth and polished, while the thorax has a rough, punctate-rugose texture [2]. The mandibles have five indistinct denticles [2]. This is all the scientific data that exists for this entire species.
Distribution and Conservation
This species is endemic to northeastern India, known only from Meghalaya (East Khasi Hills) and Arunachal Pradesh [1]. The entire global population consists of seven museum specimens from a single collection event in 1975 [2]. The wild population status is completely unknown, but with such limited records, any collection from the wild could potentially harm the species. Additionally, Indian wildlife protection laws may prohibit collection of native ant species.
Related Species and General Biology
Aenictus shillongensis belongs to the army ant genus Aenictus, subfamily Dorylinae [3]. Most Aenictus species are predators of other ants and termites, and some form temporary nests called bivouacs [3]. However, these are general patterns, none of this has been confirmed for A. shillongensis specifically. The genus-level biology cannot be assumed to apply to this species without direct observation.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I keep Aenictus shillongensis?
No. This species is known only from seven museum specimens. No live colonies have ever been found or studied. The basic biology needed to keep them alive is completely unknown [2][3].
How long until first workers?
Unknown. Scientists have never observed the development of this species [3].
What do Aenictus shillongensis eat?
Unknown for this species. While other Aenictus species are predators of other ants and termites, this has never been documented for A. shillongensis [3].
Can I keep multiple queens together?
Unknown. The colony structure of this species has never been documented. No queens have ever been found [3].
Do Aenictus shillongensis need hibernation?
Likely no, they come from tropical northeastern India. However, this has never been confirmed for this specific species [3].
Are Aenictus shillongensis good for beginners?
Absolutely not. This species is known only from seven museum specimens collected in 1975. Their biology is completely unknown, and no one has ever kept them [2][3].
How big do colonies get?
Unknown. No wild colonies have ever been studied [3].
Can I collect them from India?
No. They are endemic to a small region in northeastern India with only seven known specimens. Collecting from the wild could harm an already extremely rare species [2][1].
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References
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