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

Monomorium humilior

Non-Parasitic Queen Não Gamergate
Nome cient.
Monomorium humilior
Tribo
Solenopsidini
Subfamília
Myrmicinae
Autor
Forel, 1910
Distribuição
Encontrado em 1 países

Introdução

Monomorium humilior is a small ant species belonging to the Monomorium rothsteini species group, native to the central desert region of Australia's Northern Territory. Workers are small ants with a dark amber orange head and mesosoma, brown antennae and legs, and a dark brown to nearly black abdomen. Queens are larger and feature a striking bicolored pattern with amber orange head, legs, and metasoma contrasting against a light to dark brown mesosoma. This species shows notable clinal variation, northern specimens near the type locality are larger with coarser sculpture and more amber coloring, while southern specimens around Alice Springs are smaller and more orange-brown with reduced sculpture . The species belongs to the subfamily Myrmicinae and tribe Solenopsidini, meaning it has a functional stinger that injects venom composed of piperidine alkaloids. Little is known about the biology of this species in the wild .

A carregar mapa de distribuição...

Estado por país, de Kass et al. 2022 & Wong et al. 2023

Nativa Invasiva Introduzida (interior) Interceptada Desconhecido
2000 - 2026

Quick Summary

  • Difficulty: Unknown, no captive care literature exists
  • Origin & Habitat: Central desert region of Northern Territory, Australia. Inhabits arid to semi-arid desert environments [1][2].
  • Colony Type: Colony structure is unconfirmed. As a Monomorium species, it may form single-queen colonies, though this has not been documented.
  • Size & Growth:
    • Queen: ~4-6mm, inferred from Monomorium genus patterns (no total body length data available)
    • Worker: ~2-4mm, inferred from Monomorium genus patterns (no total body length data available)
    • Colony: Unknown, no colony size data exists in scientific literature
    • Growth: Unknown, no development data available
    • Development: Unknown, no development data exists for this species. (No direct measurements of development time exist. Monomorium species typically develop relatively quickly, but specific timelines for M. humilior are unconfirmed.)
  • Antkeeping:
    • Temperature: Unconfirmed, no thermal studies exist for this species. As a central Australian desert species, it likely tolerates warm conditions. Based on typical Monomorium preferences and its arid habitat, aim for room temperature (20-26°C) and adjust based on colony activity. Avoid temperatures below 15°C or above 35°C until more is known.
    • Humidity: Unconfirmed, no humidity data exists. As a desert species from the central Northern Territory, it likely prefers drier conditions than typical rainforest ants. Provide a gradient from moderately moist to dry areas, allowing the colony to self-select. Avoid overly damp conditions.
    • Diapause: Unknown, no seasonal studies exist. Central Australian populations likely experience some winter dormancy given the region's seasonal temperature swings, but specific diapause requirements are unconfirmed.
    • Nesting: Nesting preferences are unconfirmed. Based on related Monomorium species and its desert habitat, it likely nests in soil or under stones. For captivity, standard test tubes work for founding colonies. A small formicarium with moderate humidity and some dry areas would be appropriate once the colony establishes.
  • Behavior: Behavior is largely unstudied. As a Monomorium species, workers are likely active foragers that search for protein and sugar sources. This species has a functional stinger typical of the Solenopsidini tribe, though the sting is likely too small to penetrate human skin significantly. Their small size means escape prevention requires fine mesh barriers. Treat as a small, potentially defensive species and use appropriate caution.
  • Common Issues: no captive care data exists, this is an essentially unstudied species in captivity, desert origin means overwatering or excessive humidity may be harmful, small worker size creates escape risk, fine mesh barriers are essential, lack of development data makes timing predictions uncertain, wild-caught colonies may carry unknown parasites or pathogens

Species Identification and Variation

Monomorium humilior is a member of the Monomorium rothsteini species complex, a group of closely related ants that have historically caused taxonomic confusion. Workers are small ants with a distinctive appearance featuring a dark amber orange head and mesosoma, brown antennae and legs, and a dark brown to nearly black abdomen. The species shows significant clinal variation across its range. Northern specimens collected near the type locality (Tennant Creek) are somewhat larger with coarser sculpture and entirely reticulate first abdominal segment, displaying more amber orange coloring. Southern specimens from around Alice Springs are smaller, orange-brown, with most sculpture on the first abdominal segment very faint and restricted to the anterior third. This variation can make identification challenging, as specimens from different regions may appear quite different despite being the same species [1].

Distribution and Habitat

This species is known only from the central desert region of Australia's Northern Territory. The type locality is Tennant Creek, with specimens also collected around Alice Springs. Its range overlaps with several other Monomorium species including Monomorium eremoides, Monomorium eremum, and Monomorium subapterum. The central Australian desert environment is characterized by extreme temperatures, low rainfall, and sparse vegetation. This is an arid to semi-arid habitat, which suggests M. humilior is adapted to drier conditions than many other ant species. The species has been collected at multiple locations within this region, but specific microhabitat preferences (nesting sites, foraging patterns) have not been documented [1][2].

Taxonomic History

Monomorium humilior was originally described by Forel in 1910 as a variety of Monomorium rothsteini. It was later treated as a subspecies and then as a junior synonym of M. rothsteini by Heterick in 2001. However, Sparks, Andersen, and Austin redescribed it as a valid species in 2014 based on systematic analysis of the rothsteini complex. The type material consists of a lectotype worker (designated by Sparks et al. in 2014), paratype workers, and a paralectotype queen. The original description did not include a queen, and the current understanding of the queen caste comes from later examination of type material. The species was also previously placed in the genus Chelaner before molecular phylogenetics confirmed its placement within Monomorium s.str. for Australasian species [1][3][4].

Current Knowledge Gaps

Monomorium humilior is one of many Australian ant species about which very little is known. Despite being formally described over a century ago, no scientific studies have examined its biology in detail. There is no data on colony structure (single queen vs. multiple queen), founding behavior (whether queens seal themselves in like typical claustral species or must forage during founding), development times, temperature and humidity preferences, or dietary requirements. The genetic sequences have been deposited in GenBank (COI sequences), but ecological and behavioral studies are lacking. For antkeepers, this means there is no established care protocol. Success with this species would represent genuine pioneering work in ant husbandry. Any keeper attempting to keep this species should document their observations carefully and consider sharing findings with the antkeeping community [2].

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I keep Monomorium humilior ants?

No established care protocol exists for this species. It has never been documented in the antkeeping hobby. Based on its desert origin and relation to other Monomorium species, start with standard test tube setups for founding colonies, room temperature (20-26°C), and moderate to low humidity. Offer protein (small insects) and sugar sources (honey or sugar water) and observe acceptance. Document your results carefully since any successful colony would be pioneering work.

What do Monomorium humilior ants eat?

Diet is unconfirmed, no feeding studies exist for this species. As a Monomorium species, it likely accepts both protein sources (small insects) and sugar sources (honeydew, nectar). Start with small live prey like fruit flies or pinhead crickets, and offer sugar water or honey. Monitor for acceptance and adjust accordingly.

How long does it take for Monomorium humilior to produce first workers?

Unknown, no development data exists for this species. Typical Monomorium species take several weeks from egg to worker at optimal temperatures, but this is an estimate based on related species, not confirmed data for M. humilior.

What temperature do Monomorium humilior ants need?

Temperature requirements are unconfirmed. As a central Australian desert species, it likely tolerates warm conditions. Start with room temperature (20-26°C) and observe colony behavior. Avoid temperatures below 15°C or above 35°C until more is known about its tolerances.

Are Monomorium humilior ants good for beginners?

No, this species is not recommended for beginners. It has never been documented in the antkeeping hobby, meaning there is no established care protocol. Success would require experienced keepers willing to experiment and document their observations. Beginners should start with well-established species like Lasius niger, Camponotus species, or Myrmica rubra.

How big do Monomorium humilior colonies get?

Maximum colony size is unknown, no colony size data exists in scientific literature. Related Monomorium species typically form colonies ranging from dozens to several hundred workers.

Do Monomorium humilior ants need hibernation?

Diapause requirements are unknown. The central Australian habitat experiences seasonal temperature variation, so some winter dormancy is possible. If the colony shows reduced activity in cooler months, allow a cool period (15-18°C) for several weeks. Do not force hibernation until more is known.

Can I keep multiple Monomorium humilior queens together?

Colony structure is unconfirmed, no data exists on whether this species is single-queen (monogyne) or multi-queen (polygyne). Combining unrelated queens is not recommended since this has not been studied and could result in aggression.

Where is Monomorium humilior found in the wild?

This species is endemic to the central desert region of Australia's Northern Territory. Known locations include Tennant Creek (the type locality) and the area around Alice Springs. It inhabits arid to semi-arid desert environments [1][2].

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References

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