Apterostigma angustum
- Nome científico
- Apterostigma angustum
- Tribo
- Attini
- Subfamília
- Myrmicinae
- Autor
- Lattke, 1997
- Distribuição
- Encontrada em 1 países
Introdução
Apterostigma angustum is a small fungus-growing ant from the tribe Attini, found in the tropical forests of northern South America. These ants inhabit mid-elevation regions in Venezuela, Colombia, and French Guiana, ranging from 115 meters to 1221 meters above sea level [AntWiki]. Workers are identified by their triangular frontal lobes when viewed from above, an egg-shaped head profile in side view, and relatively small compound eyes . Unlike leaf-cutter ants, this species belongs to the non-leaf-cutting fungus growers and cultivates fungal gardens using dead plant material and organic debris rather than fresh leaves [AntWiki]. This is a specialist species with complex husbandry requirements centered around maintaining a healthy fungus garden.
Quick Summary
- Difficulty: Expert
- Origin & Habitat: Mid-elevation tropical forests of Venezuela, Colombia, and French Guiana, from 115m to 1221m altitude [1][2]
- Colony Type: Unknown, colony structure unconfirmed for this species
- Size & Growth:
- Queen: Size data unavailable, no measurements available in research literature
- Worker: Size data unavailable, no measurements available in research literature
- Colony: Unknown, no colony size data available
- Growth: Slow
- Development: Unknown, development time unstudied for this species (Fungus-growing ants typically develop slowly. No specific data available for Apterostigma angustum.)
- Antkeeping:
- Temperature: Keep at 20-24°C based on mid-elevation habitat preference, this is condition-based guidance [1]. Monitor colony activity to fine-tune.
- Humidity: High humidity required, roughly 70-80%. Keep the nest substrate consistently damp but not waterlogged.
- Diapause: No, tropical species active year-round [1]
- Nesting: Requires enclosed cavities with space for fungus garden. Naturalistic setups with rotting wood or plaster nests work best [2].
- Behavior: Slow-moving, cryptic foragers that process organic debris. Non-aggressive toward humans. Moderate escape risk due to small size.
- Common Issues: fungus garden contamination with mold kills colonies quickly, incorrect substrate causes garden failure, they need dried plant matter, not fresh leaves, temperatures above 26°C damage the sensitive fungus, low humidity desiccates both the ants and their fungal food source, wild-caught colonies may carry parasitic mites that overwhelm captive setups
Fungus Garden Care
As a member of the Attini tribe, Apterostigma angustum cultivates a fungal garden that serves as the colony's primary food source. Unlike leaf-cutter ants, this species uses insect droppings, dead plant material, and other organic debris to feed their fungus [2]. You must provide a suitable substrate such as dried leaves, small twigs, or pre-digested plant matter. The fungus garden requires constant humidity and temperatures around 20-24°C to prevent mold contamination. If the garden dies, the colony starves. Watch for white or gray mold spreading through the garden material, this signals contamination that usually proves fatal.
Nest Design and Setup
In nature, these ants nest in cavities in rotting wood or under stones in humid forests [2]. In captivity, use a naturalistic setup with a moist plaster or Y-tong nest section connected to a foraging area. The nest chamber must maintain high humidity around 70-80% and provide space for the fungus garden. Avoid dry nests or those with excessive ventilation, as the fungus requires stable moist conditions. A test tube setup will not work for this species, they need room to establish and expand their fungal garden.
Temperature and Humidity
Collection records show this species lives at elevations from 115m to 1221m in the Colombian Andes and Venezuelan mountains [1]. This suggests they prefer cooler tropical conditions than lowland Amazonian species. Keep them at 20-24°C with high humidity around 70-80%. Use a heating cable on one side of the nest to create a gentle gradient, but avoid overheating as this damages the fungus garden. The substrate should feel damp to the touch but not waterlogged. If workers cluster near the heat source, increase temperature slightly, if they avoid it, reduce heat.
Feeding Your Colony
Do not offer fresh leaves or vegetables. Instead provide dried leaves, small pieces of hardwood, insect frass, or partially decayed plant matter that the ants can process for their fungus [2]. They may also accept small amounts of sugar water or honeydew for energy, but the fungus garden provides their main nutrition. Remove uneaten perishable food quickly to prevent mold that could contaminate the garden. The ants will chew the plant material into a pulp to feed their fungus, you will see them carrying bits of debris into their nest chambers.
Colony Founding and Growth
Founding behavior is unconfirmed for this species. No specific studies have documented how Apterostigma angustum queens establish new colonies. Growth is likely slow, with colonies possibly reaching only a few hundred workers over several years. Development time from egg to worker is unknown for this species. Be patient, these are not fast-growing species like Lasius or Formica.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I keep Apterostigma angustum in a test tube?
No. Test tubes lack the space and substrate needed for their fungus garden. They require a specialized naturalistic setup with room for fungal cultivation and high humidity maintenance.
What do Apterostigma angustum eat?
They eat fungus grown on decaying plant material and insect droppings. Do not feed them fresh leaves like leaf-cutter ants. Provide dried leaves, twigs, or prepared fungus substrate.
How long until first workers for Apterostigma angustum?
Unknown. No development data is available for this species.
Do Apterostigma angustum need hibernation?
No. They come from tropical regions and remain active year-round.
Are Apterostigma angustum good for beginners?
No. They are expert-level ants due to their specialized fungus-growing requirements and sensitivity to environmental conditions.
Can I keep multiple queens together?
Unknown and not recommended. Most fungus-growing ants are single-queen species, and combining queens likely leads to fighting.
What temperature do Apterostigma angustum need?
Keep them at 20-24°C based on their mid-elevation forest habitat. Avoid temperatures above 26°C as this may harm their fungus garden.
Why did my fungus garden die?
Fungus gardens die from contamination, incorrect substrate, or improper humidity/temperature. Once the garden dies, the colony cannot survive.
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References
Este guia de cuidados está sob a licença CC BY-SA 4.0 .
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