Aenictus hilli
- Sci. Name
- Aenictus hilli
- Subfamily
- Dorylinae
- Author
- Clark, 1928
- Distribution
- Found in 1 countries
Introduction
Aenictus hilli is an Australian army ant known only from male specimens, making it impossible to identify living colonies in the field . John Clark described the species in 1928 from a single male collected at Malanda, Queensland . Researchers have found additional males across Queensland, the Northern Territory, and Western Australia that resemble the type specimen, but none came with workers . Without worker-associated males or genetic analysis, scientists cannot determine which worker-based species these males belong to . As a member of the army ant genus Aenictus, these ants conduct raids using large numbers of workers to attack other ant colonies, social wasps, and termites .
Quick Summary
- Difficulty: Expert (species cannot be identified in the field)
- Origin & Habitat: Queensland, Australia, with similar males found in Northern Territory and Western Australia [1].
- Colony Type: Unknown, described from males only. Army ant colonies typically have multiple queens, but this remains unconfirmed for A. hilli.
- Size & Growth:
- Queen: size data unavailable, no queens described [1]
- Worker: size data unavailable, workers have not been identified [1]
- Colony: Unknown, army ant colonies typically number in the thousands, but specific size for this species unconfirmed
- Growth: Unknown
- Development: Unknown, no worker development data available (Species identity uncertain without male specimens)
- Antkeeping:
- Temperature: Unknown, based on Queensland distribution, likely warm subtropical conditions, but unconfirmed
- Humidity: Unknown
- Diapause: Unknown, likely none given Australian tropical/subtropical distribution
- Nesting: Unknown, army ants typically form temporary bivouacs rather than permanent nests [2]
- Behavior: Presumed army ant behavior including nomadic raiding of other ant colonies [2], but specific temperament and activity patterns unknown. Escape risk unknown.
- Common Issues: cannot identify workers without associated males, making collection and identification impossible, army ant biology requires massive foraging areas and constant supply of other ant colonies as food, nomadic lifestyle means they do not stay in one nest location, making standard formicarium housing unsuitable, lack of basic biological data makes captive care speculative
The Male-Only Problem: Why Workers Remain a Mystery
Aenictus hilli presents a unique challenge for ant taxonomists and keepers alike: scientists have only described males [1]. The original description came from a single male collected at Malanda, Queensland in 1928 [1]. Since then, researchers have found additional males across Queensland, the Northern Territory, and Western Australia that look similar to the type specimen, but none came with workers [1].
Four other Aenictus species occur in the same general area: Aenictus aratus, Aenictus nesiotis, Aenictus prolixus, and Aenictus turneri [1]. Without worker-associated males or genetic analysis, scientists cannot determine which of these species the males of A. hilli actually belong to, or if they represent a distinct species with workers that look like one of these four [1]. This means you cannot identify a living colony of A. hilli even if you found one, because the workers could look identical to several other species.
Army Ant Biology: What the Genus Tells Us
While specific details about Aenictus hilli remain unknown, the genus Aenictus contains true army ants that show distinctive behaviors [2]. These ants conduct raids using large numbers of workers to attack other ants, social wasps, and termites [2]. Foraging happens both day and night, usually across the ground surface but sometimes climbing into vegetation [2].
During raids, many workers attack a single nest or small area simultaneously, with several workers cooperating to carry large prey items back to their bivouac [2]. These ants live a nomadic lifestyle, alternating between migratory phases where they form temporary bivouacs in sheltered places above ground, and stationary phases with semi-permanent underground nests [2]. During the nomadic phase, the bivouac moves regularly, sometimes more than once per day when larvae need large amounts of food [2].
Why This Species Is Not Suitable for Captive Keeping
You should not attempt to keep Aenictus hilli. First, you cannot identify the species without male specimens, which are only found during specific breeding periods [1]. Any workers you collect could belong to several similar species in the same area.
Second, army ants require specialized care that differs completely from standard ant keeping. They need enormous foraging spaces to conduct their raiding behavior, and they require a constant supply of other ant colonies or termites as food [2]. Standard formicariums cannot accommodate their nomadic lifestyle, which involves moving the entire colony frequently [2].
Finally, basic information like queen size, worker size, development time, and temperature requirements remain completely unknown. Without this data, providing proper care is impossible.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I keep Aenictus hilli in captivity?
No. This species is only known from male specimens, so you cannot identify a colony even if you found one [1]. Additionally, army ants require massive foraging areas and constant supplies of other ant colonies as food, making them unsuitable for standard ant keeping setups [2].
How do I identify Aenictus hilli workers?
You cannot identify workers of this species. Aenictus hilli is described from males only, and workers could resemble those of Aenictus aratus, Aenictus nesiotis, Aenictus prolixus, or Aenictus turneri, all of which occur in the same area [1].
What does Aenictus hilli eat?
Scientists have not observed the feeding habits of this specific species. However, army ants in the genus Aenictus primarily attack other ants, social wasps, and termites during raids [2].
How big do Aenictus hilli colonies get?
Colony size is unknown. Army ant colonies typically number in the thousands to millions of workers, but no data exists for Aenictus hilli specifically.
Where can I find Aenictus hilli queens?
No queens have ever been described for this species. The species is only known from males collected in Queensland, Northern Territory, and Western Australia [1].
Can I keep Aenictus hilli in a test tube?
No. Army ants require large spaces and do not thrive in test tubes. Their nomadic lifestyle involves moving the entire colony frequently, which is impossible in a test tube setup [2].
Do Aenictus hilli need hibernation?
Unknown, but likely not. The species occurs in tropical and subtropical regions of Australia where temperatures remain warm year-round [1].
Are Aenictus hilli dangerous?
Unknown. Army ants can bite, but without confirmed worker specimens, sting presence and venom potency remain unconfirmed.
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
No specimens available
We couldn't find any AntWeb specimens for Aenictus hilli in our database.
Literature
Loading distribution map...Loading products...