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

Leptanilloides atlanticus

Non-Parasitic Queen No Gamergate
Sci. Name
Leptanilloides atlanticus
Subfamily
Dorylinae
Author
Silva <i>et al.</i>, 2013
Distribution
Found in 1 countries

Introduction

Leptanilloides atlanticus is an extremely rare army ant species known only from a single collection of 39 workers in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest. Workers are tiny, with a yellowish-brown body covered in short hairs. They have distinctive morphological features including an enlarged forefemur, a subpetiolar process with a sharp tooth, and shallow constrictions between abdominal segments IV-VI. This species is part of the Leptanilloides biconstrictus species group and can be identified by its densely foveolate head, uninterrupted reticulation on the mesopleura and metapleura, and a petiole that is as long as the postpetiole. The genus Leptanilloides is cryptic and subterranean, making these ants exceptionally difficult to find and study in the wild .

Loading distribution map...

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: Southeastern Brazil (São Paulo, Santo André, Paranapiacaba) at 800m altitude in secondary montane Atlantic Forest. The region has a humid climate without a well-defined dry season, with annual rainfall between 1860-4400mm [1].
  • Colony Type: Unknown, only worker caste has been documented. No queens, males, or colony structure has ever been observed. This is one of the most poorly known ant species in existence.
  • Size & Growth:
    • Queen: Unknown, queen caste has never been described
    • Worker: Workers are tiny, inferred from Leptanilloides genus at approximately 2-3mm [2]
    • Colony: Unknown, only 39 workers were ever collected in a single pitfall trap
    • Growth: Unknown
    • Development: Unknown, no colony development has ever been documented (No data exists on development. Related Dorylinae species typically have claustral founding, but this is unconfirmed for L. atlanticus)
  • Antkeeping:
    • Temperature: Inferred from montane Atlantic Forest habitat, likely prefers cooler temperatures than tropical lowland ants, possibly 18-24°C. No direct data available.
    • Humidity: High humidity required, the Atlantic Forest habitat receives 1860-4400mm annual rainfall with no dry season. Expect 70-85% humidity minimum.
    • Diapause: Unknown, no seasonal data available for this species
    • Nesting: Unknown, likely subterranean nesters based on genus behavior. The single collection was from a pitfall trap on the forest floor, suggesting they forage at ground level. No natural nests have ever been found.
  • Behavior: Unknown, no behavioral observations exist for this species. As a Dorylinae ant, they likely have typical army ant behaviors (nomadic hunting, raiding columns), but this is entirely speculative. Their small size suggests they may be cryptic foragers. Escape risk is likely high given their tiny size.
  • Common Issues: this species has never been kept in captivity, no husbandry protocols exist., only 39 workers have ever been collected, making wild colonies essentially unavailable., no queen or male has ever been described, founding behavior is completely unknown., subterranean lifestyle makes them extremely difficult to locate and study., risk of inadvertently collecting the last remaining known population.

Why This Species Is Not Recommended for Hobbyists

Leptanilloides atlanticus is one of the most poorly known ant species in the world. Only 39 workers have ever been collected, all from a single pitfall trap in Brazil in 2007. No queen, no male, no colony structure, no behavioral observations, and no natural nests have ever been documented. There is simply no information available to keep this species alive in captivity. Attempting to maintain this species would be essentially experimental research, not antkeeping. Additionally, collecting from the wild risks harming what may already be a tiny, localized population. For these reasons, this species should be left to professional myrmecologists studying them in their natural habitat [1].

Taxonomy and Identification

Leptanilloides atlanticus belongs to the subfamily Dorylinae (army ants) and the Leptanilloides biconstrictus species group. Workers are tiny with a yellowish-brown coloration. Key identification features include: densely foveolate head with 20-30 foveolae across the head midline, uninterrupted reticulation on mesopleura and metapleura, a subpetiolar process with an acute forward-projecting tooth, and a petiole that is as long as the postpetiole. They can be distinguished from similar species like Leptanilloides biconstrictus, Leptanilloides femoralis, and Leptanilloides gracilis by combinations of these morphological traits [1].

Distribution and Biogeography

This species represents a significant range extension for the genus Leptanilloides, which is primarily known from Andean regions of Bolivia, Colombia, and Ecuador. The discovery of L. atlanticus in southeastern Brazil shows a disjunct distribution pattern between Andean Leptanilloides and this Atlantic Forest population. This pattern is similar to that seen in various montane birds, frogs, rodents, and butterflies, likely reflecting historical climate connections between the Andes and the Serra do Mar mountain range. However, researchers note that the apparent distribution gap might also reflect insufficient collecting effort for these cryptic subterranean ants, which may be more widespread than currently known [1].

What We Would Need to Know to Keep This Species

If future research enables captive husbandry, keepers would need to understand: colony structure (single queen or multi-queen), founding behavior (whether queens seal themselves in like typical claustral ants or must forage), diet preferences (likely predatory on small invertebrates like other Dorylinae), temperature and humidity requirements specific to this species, and nesting preferences (depth, substrate, moisture levels). The related genus Asphinctanilloides has been studied in captivity and suggests these ants may be specialized predators. However, until queens and colonies are discovered and studied in the wild, captive maintenance remains impossible to guide responsibly.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I keep Leptanilloides atlanticus ants?

No. This species should not be kept by hobbyists. Only 39 workers have ever been collected, no queen or colony has ever been documented, and there is no captive husbandry information available. Keeping this species would require professional research conditions and risks harm to a potentially tiny wild population.

How big do Leptanilloides atlanticus workers get?

Workers are extremely tiny. Based on the genus, they are approximately 2-3mm in total length, making them among the smallest ants in the Dorylinae subfamily. The only measurements available are head width (0.24-0.25mm) and head length (0.34-0.36mm), which confirm their small size.

Where does Leptanilloides atlanticus live?

This species is known only from a single location in southeastern Brazil: the Reserva Biológica do Alto da Serra de Paranapiacaba in São Paulo state, at 800m altitude in the Atlantic Forest biome.

What do Leptanilloides atlanticus ants eat?

Unknown. As Dorylinae army ants, they likely are predatory on other small invertebrates, but no direct observations of feeding behavior exist for this species.

Are Leptanilloides atlanticus ants aggressive?

No information exists on the temperament or behavior of this species. As army ants, Dorylinae can be aggressive when hunting, but this is entirely speculative for L. atlanticus specifically.

How long do Leptanilloides atlanticus colonies live?

Unknown, no colony has ever been documented. The entire species is known from a single collection of 39 workers in a pitfall trap.

Can I find Leptanilloides atlanticus in the wild?

Extremely unlikely. This is one of the rarest ant species known, with only 39 workers ever collected from a single location in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest. Professional researchers have not found additional specimens since 2007. These ants are likely subterranean and cryptic, making them nearly impossible to locate.

Do Leptanilloides atlanticus need hibernation?

Unknown. The Atlantic Forest habitat is tropical to subtropical with high year-round humidity, so a true hibernation is unlikely. However, no seasonal data exists for this species.

Is Leptanilloides atlanticus a good beginner ant?

Absolutely not. This species is not suitable for any antkeeper except professional researchers. There is no captive husbandry information, no queens are available, and the species may not even be maintainable in captivity. Beginners should choose from well-established species with documented care requirements.

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

Creative Commons License

This caresheet is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0 .