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

Pseudomyrmex comitator

Королева-паразит Нет Гамергейт
Науч. назв.
Pseudomyrmex comitator
Триба
Pseudomyrmecini
Подсемейство
Pseudomyrmecinae
Автор
Ward & Branstetter, 2022
Распространение
Встречается в 0 странах
Определяется ИИ
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Введение

Pseudomyrmex comitator is an extraordinarily rare ant species known only from two high-elevation sites in Chiapas, Mexico. Queens are very small (exact total length not recorded, but head length is about 1 mm) with an elongated head, smooth mandibles, and a distinctively swollen, short petiole. They are dark brown to brownish-black, with the head and gaster darker than the rest of the body . This species is found in pine oak and Liquidambar forest at approximately 1,520 meters elevation . What makes P. comitator unique is its lifestyle as a workerless inquiline - a social parasite that lives entirely within nests of its host species, Pseudomyrmex cognatus. These queens never produce their own workers. Instead, they infiltrate host colonies and rely on the host workforce for survival. The only known queen was collected from a nest containing workers, alate males, alate queens, and brood of P. cognatus .

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Статус по странам, от Kass et al. 2022 & Wong et al. 2023

Местный Инвазивный Интродуцирован (в помещении) Перехвачен Неизвестно
2000 - 2026

Quick Summary

  • Difficulty: Expert
  • Origin & Habitat: Chiapas, Mexico at 1,520 m elevation in pine oak and Liquidambar forest [1].
  • Colony Type: Workerless social parasite (inquiline), queens live permanently within host colonies (Pseudomyrmex cognatus) and produce no workers of their own [1].
  • Size & Growth:
    • Queen: Size data unavailable (only head measurements recorded, not total length) [1]
    • Worker: This species has no workers [1]
    • Colony: Only the parasitic queen(s) exist within the host nest [1]
    • Growth: N/A
    • Development: N/A, no workers produced (This species produces no workers. Reproduction is limited to alates (males and queens) that the host colony rears.)
  • Antkeeping:
    • Temperature: Unknown, no captive studies exist. Based on high-elevation Mexican habitat, likely prefers cooler conditions than typical tropical ants, but this is speculation [1].
    • Humidity: Unknown, no captive studies exist.
    • Diapause: Unknown, insufficient data.
    • Nesting: Lives within dead sticks in host nests. In captivity, would require a thriving colony of Pseudomyrmex cognatus as a host.
  • Behavior: As a social parasite, P. comitator queens live permanently inside host colonies. Like all Pseudomyrmecinae ants, they possess a sting, but they are not aggressive because they rely on host workers for defense and food. Queens cannot forage or survive outside a host colony. Escape risk is minimal since they cannot establish independent colonies [1].
  • Common Issues: This species cannot be kept in captivity without a host colony of Pseudomyrmex cognatus, which itself is difficult to maintain., Queens cannot survive independently, they produce no workers and cannot forage for food., The species is known from only two specimens and has never been maintained in captivity., No information exists on proper care requirements, temperature, or humidity., Introducing a parasite queen to a host colony carries a high risk of rejection or death for both queens.

Why This Species Cannot Be Kept

Pseudomyrmex comitator is one of the most difficult ants to keep in captivity, possibly impossible. This species is a workerless inquiline, meaning it has evolved to live permanently within nests of its host species, Pseudomyrmex cognatus. The queens never produce workers. They cannot forage, cannot defend themselves, and cannot survive outside a host colony. Keeping this species would require first establishing a thriving colony of Pseudomyrmex cognatus, then somehow introducing the parasite without killing the host queen or being rejected by host workers. This has never been documented and is not recommended. For all practical purposes, this species is not suitable for captive keeping [1].

The Parasitic Lifestyle

P. comitator represents an extreme example of social parasitism in ants. The queens are notably smaller than their host queens (head width 0.77-0.81 mm vs 0.99-1.11 mm in P. cognatus queens), lack striations on their mandibles, and have reduced body pilosity. They have evolved to infiltrate host colonies and live off the host's resources. The only known specimen was collected from a nest containing workers, alate males, alate queens, and brood of P. cognatus, evidence that the parasite was being maintained by the host colony [1]. This type of relationship is called inquiline parasitism: the parasite queen lives in the nest, lays her own eggs, and relies on host workers to raise her brood, but produces no workers of her own.

Distribution and Rarity

This species is known from only two specimens collected from adjacent sites in Chiapas, Mexico at 1,520 m elevation. Both collection sites were in highland pine oak forest, a relatively cool, moist habitat compared to typical lowland tropical areas. The holotype was collected from a nest in a dead stick, while the paratype was found as a stray on the ground nearby. The species was only formally described in 2022,making it one of the most recently described ant species. Its entire known range consists of two locations within a few kilometers of each other [1].

Related Species and Host

Pseudomyrmex comitator is phylogenetically embedded within Pseudomyrmex cognatus, it evolved from the host species relatively recently, with an estimated divergence of about 0.9 million years ago. Genetic analysis shows it is more closely related to P. cognatus populations from Honduras and Nicaragua than to the Chiapas population of the host, suggesting it may have originated from a different population and then spread. The host, P. cognatus, is a moderately large Pseudomyrmex species that nests in dead twigs and sticks in forest habitats. If you were to attempt keeping this parasite, you would first need to locate and maintain a colony of P. cognatus, which itself requires specific forest habitat conditions [1].

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I keep Pseudomyrmex comitator in my ant farm?

No. This species is a workerless social parasite that cannot survive without a host colony of Pseudomyrmex cognatus. It produces no workers and cannot forage. There are no documented cases of anyone successfully maintaining this species in captivity. It is not suitable for antkeeping [1].

What does Pseudomyrmex comitator eat?

Unknown. As a social parasite living within host colonies, it presumably receives food through trophallaxis (mouth-to-mouth food sharing) from host workers. It cannot feed itself independently. No captive feeding observations exist.

How do I start a Pseudomyrmex comitator colony?

You cannot. This species cannot be started as a colony because it produces no workers. The only option would be to locate a wild colony of Pseudomyrmex cognatus and somehow introduce the parasite, which has never been documented and would almost certainly be rejected or killed by host workers [1].

Does Pseudomyrmex comitator sting?

Yes. Like all ants in the subfamily Pseudomyrmecinae, this species has a sting. However, the queens are very small, and the sting is unlikely to affect humans. Since there are no workers, there is no threat of worker stings.

What temperature does Pseudomyrmex comitator need?

Unknown. The species is known from high-elevation (1,520 m) forest in Chiapas, Mexico, suggesting it prefers cooler conditions than typical tropical ants. However, no captive studies exist to confirm temperature requirements [1].

Is Pseudomyrmex comitator dangerous?

No. This species poses no danger to humans. Queens are tiny, have a small sting, and produce no workers. The only concern would be ecological if released in non-native areas [1].

Why is Pseudomyrmex comitator so rare?

This species is known from only two specimens ever collected, both from the same small area in Chiapas, Mexico. It may always have been rare, or it may be that it is simply difficult to detect since it lives hidden within host colonies. The species was only described in 2022,so it has received relatively little study [1].

What is an inquiline ant?

An inquiline is a social parasite that lives permanently within the nest of another ant species. Unlike some parasites that take over host colonies (like slave-making ants), inquiline queens produce no workers of their own and rely entirely on host workers for survival. P. comitator is an extreme example, a completely workerless inquiline [1].

Are there other Pseudomyrmex parasites?

The Pseudomyrmex genus has several known social parasites. P. comitator is unusual because it appears to be a workerless inquiline that has evolved from its host species (P. cognatus). Other Pseudomyrmex species show various degrees of social parasitism, but few are as extreme as P. comitator [1].

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References

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