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

Aenictus prolixus

Monogynous Non-Parasitic Queen No Gamergate
Sci. Name
Aenictus prolixus
Subfamily
Dorylinae
Author
Shattuck, 2008
Distribution
Found in 2 countries
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Introduction

Aenictus prolixus is a tiny army ant from northern Australia . These yellow-red ants have smooth heads and relatively long antennae compared to their body size, making them distinctive within the Aenictus pachycerus species group . They live in the tropical forests of northern Queensland and the Northern Territory, where they forage under stones and across the forest floor . What makes this species unique is their army ant lifestyle . Unlike ants that settle permanently in one nest, Aenictus prolixus lives a nomadic existence, constantly moving between temporary camps called bivouacs . They conduct organized raids day and night, swarming other ant nests, wasp colonies, and termite mounds to steal brood and prey . Several workers coordinate to carry large prey items back to their ever-changing camp . This wandering lifestyle and their specialized diet of other social insects makes them nearly impossible to keep in standard ant farms.

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Status by country, from Kass et al. 2022 & Wong et al. 2023

Native Invasive Introduced (indoor) Intercepted Unknown
2000 - 2026

Quick Summary

  • Difficulty: Expert
  • Origin & Habitat: Northern Australia (northern Queensland and Northern Territory), tropical rainforest and woodland, found under stones and in leaf litter [1][2]
  • Colony Type: Colony structure unconfirmed, only workers are known, queens have never been collected [2]
  • Size & Growth:
    • Queen: Unknown, queens have never been collected for this species [2]
    • Worker: Approximately 2-2.5 mm total length, inferred from Aenictus genus patterns
    • Colony: Likely large based on typical army ant biology, but exact size unconfirmed
    • Growth: Unknown, army ants typically have synchronized brood development cycles
    • Development: Unknown, no developmental data exists for this species (Army ants often have irregular brood cycles with bursts of development rather than continuous growth)
  • Antkeeping:
    • Temperature: Keep warm and stable, roughly 24-28°C, inferred from northern Australian distribution
    • Humidity: Keep substrate consistently moist but not waterlogged, matching tropical rainforest conditions
    • Diapause: No, tropical species that remains active year-round [1]
    • Nesting: Cannot use standard nests. Requires specialized army ant setup allowing for constant relocation (bivouac behavior) [3]
  • Behavior: Highly aggressive army ant that conducts organized raids on other ant colonies and termites [3]. Nomadic lifestyle means they frequently move camp, sometimes daily when raising brood [3]. Workers are extremely small creating severe escape risks.
  • Common Issues: impossible to house in standard formicaria due to nomadic bivouac behavior, they need space to form living nests from their own bodies and move constantly [3], require massive quantities of live prey consisting specifically of other ant colonies, termites, or wasps, cannot survive on standard ant foods like honey or mealworms [3], tiny worker size means they escape through the smallest gaps in any enclosure, no known method to start a captive colony since queens have never been documented and founding behavior is unconfirmed, wild-caught colonies likely contain specialized predators or parasites that die without natural host cycles

Army Ant Biology and Housing Challenges

Aenictus prolixus is a true army ant, which means they do not live in permanent nests like Lasius or Camponotus [3]. Instead, they alternate between a stationary phase where they occupy semi-permanent underground nests, and a nomadic phase where they form temporary bivouacs in sheltered places above ground [3]. During the nomadic phase, the entire colony moves regularly, sometimes more than once per day, especially when larvae need large amounts of food [3].

This lifestyle makes them impossible to keep in standard ant farms, test tubes, or formicaria. In captivity, you would need a specialized setup that allows the colony to form a living bivouac (a structure made from the ants' own bodies clinging together) and space to move frequently [3]. Most ant keepers lack the facilities to maintain colonies that require constant relocation and specialized prey delivery systems.

Feeding and Diet Requirements

These ants are specialist predators that primarily attack other ants, social wasps, and termites [3]. During raids, numerous workers swarm a single target nest, with several workers coordinating to carry large prey items back to their bivouac [3]. They forage both day and night, usually across the ground surface but occasionally moving into trees [3].

You cannot feed Aenictus prolixus with standard ant keeping foods like sugar water, honey, or mealworms. They require living colonies of other ants or termites to raid [3]. This means maintaining a continuous supply of feeder ant colonies, which presents ethical and practical challenges for most keepers. Without constant access to appropriate live prey, the colony will starve.

Why This Species Is Not Recommended for Captivity

While Aenictus prolixus represents fascinating army ant biology, this species is unsuitable for captive keeping for several practical reasons. First, only workers are known, no queens have ever been collected or described [2]. This means you cannot start a colony from a single queen, and any wild colony you collect is already established with an unknown lifespan remaining.

Second, their nomadic behavior requires housing that allows for constant movement and bivouac formation [3]. Standard ant keeping equipment cannot accommodate this. Third, their specialized diet requires maintaining multiple other ant or termite colonies as food sources [3]. Finally, workers are small enough to escape through almost any barrier.

If you are interested in army ants, consider documenting wild colonies through photography and observation rather than attempting captivity.

Temperature and Environmental Needs

Based on their distribution in northern Queensland and the Northern Territory, Aenictus prolixus experiences tropical conditions year-round [1]. You should maintain temperatures around 24-28°C with high humidity matching rainforest conditions.

As a tropical species, they do not require hibernation or diapause [1]. They remain active throughout the year. However, maintaining stable tropical conditions in a captive setup presents its own challenges, particularly when combined with the high ventilation needed to prevent mold in such humid environments.

Identification and Similar Species

Workers of Aenictus prolixus are small, yellow-red ants with entirely smooth heads and relatively long antennae (scape index greater than 89) compared to similar species [1]. The subpetiolar process (a projection under the waist) is large and rectangular [1].

They are most similar to Aenictus acerbus and Aenictus turneri but can be separated by their longer scapes [1]. If you find these ants in the wild in northern Australia, they are likely to be foraging in columns on the ground or under stones during the day or night [1][3].

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I keep Aenictus prolixus in a test tube setup?

No. These are army ants with a nomadic lifestyle that requires constant movement and the formation of bivouacs (temporary living nests made from the ants' bodies) [3]. They cannot survive in static test tubes or standard formicaria.

How do I found an Aenictus prolixus colony from a queen?

You cannot. Queens of this species have never been collected or documented [2]. The reproductive biology remains unknown, making captive founding impossible.

What do Aenictus prolixus eat?

They are specialist predators that raid other ant colonies, social wasps, and termites [3]. They require living colonies of these prey items and cannot survive on sugar water or standard feeder insects.

How big do Aenictus prolixus colonies get?

The exact colony size is unknown. Based on typical Aenictus army ant biology, colonies are likely large but specific numbers have not been documented.

Do Aenictus prolixus ants sting?

Like most Aenictus, they probably lack a functional stinger but can bite with their mandibles. However, at their tiny size, they are too small to harm humans.

Are Aenictus prolixus good for beginners?

No. This is an expert-only species requiring specialized housing for nomadic behavior, constant supply of other ant colonies as food, and handling extremely small workers that escape easily [3].

Do Aenictus prolixus need hibernation?

No. They are tropical ants from northern Australia and remain active year-round [1].

Can I catch a wild colony of Aenictus prolixus?

While you might find a bivouac or raid column in northern Queensland or the Northern Territory, maintaining a wild-caught colony presents extreme challenges including their nomadic behavior, massive food requirements, and unknown colony health [3].

How long does Aenictus prolixus take from egg to worker?

The development timeline is unknown for this species. Army ants often have synchronized brood cycles rather than continuous development, but specific timing has not been documented.

Why do my Aenictus prolixus keep trying to escape?

This is normal army ant behavior. They are nomadic by nature and constantly move camp [3]. Additionally, at their tiny size, they can fit through gaps invisible to the naked eye.

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References

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