Cephalotes
Cephalotes | |
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Cephalotes atratus, also known as a turtle ant, image taken at Soberania National Park, Panama | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Class: | Insecta |
Order: | Hymenoptera |
Suborder: | Apocrita |
Family: | Formicidae |
Subfamily: | Myrmicinae |
Tribe: | Attini |
Genus: | Cephalotes Latreille, 1802[1] |
Type species | |
Formica atrata Linnaeus, 1758 | |
Diversity | |
about 130 species | |
Synonyms | |
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Cephalotes is a Neotropical genus of tree-dwelling ant species, commonly known as turtle ants. All appear to be gliding ants, with the ability to "parachute" and steer their fall so as to land back on the tree trunk rather than fall to the ground, which is often flooded.[2][3]
Species
- Cephalotes adolphi (Emery, 1906)
- Cephalotes alfaroi (Emery, 1890)
- Cephalotes alveolatus (Vierbergen & Scheven, 1995)
- Cephalotes angustus (Mayr, 1862)
- Cephalotes argentatus (Smith, 1853)
- Cephalotes argentiventris De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes atratus (Linnaeus, 1758)
- Cephalotes auriger De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes basalis (Smith, 1876)
- Cephalotes betoi De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes biguttatus (Emery, 1890)
- Cephalotes bimaculatus (Smith, 1860)
- Cephalotes bivestitus (Santschi, 1922)
- Cephalotes bloosi Baroni Urbani, 1999
- Cephalotes bohlsi (Emery, 1896)
- Cephalotes borgmeieri (Kempf, 1951)
- Cephalotes brevispineus De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes bruchi (Forel, 1912)
- Cephalotes carabicus De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes chacmul Snelling, 1999
- Cephalotes christopherseni (Forel, 1912)
- Cephalotes clypeatus (Fabricius, 1804)
- Cephalotes coffeae (Kempf, 1953)
- Cephalotes columbicus (Forel, 1912)
- Cephalotes complanatus (Guerin-Meneville, 1844)
- Cephalotes conspersus (Smith, 1867)
- Cephalotes cordatus (Smith, 1853)
- Cephalotes cordiae (Stitz, 1913)
- Cephalotes cordiventris (Santschi, 1931)
- Cephalotes crenaticeps (Mayr, 1866)
- Cephalotes cristatus (Emery, 1890)
- Cephalotes curvistriatus (Forel, 1899)
- Cephalotes decolor De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes decoloratus De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes dentidorsum De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes depressus (Klug, 1824)
- Cephalotes dieteri Baroni Urbani, 1999
- Cephalotes dorbignyanus (Smith, 1853)
- Cephalotes duckei (Forel, 1906)
- Cephalotes ecuadorialis De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes eduarduli (Forel, 1921)
- Cephalotes emeryi (Forel, 1912)
- Cephalotes fiebrigi (Forel, 1906)
- Cephalotes flavigaster De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes foliaceus (Emery, 1906)
- Cephalotes fossithorax (Santschi, 1921)
- Cephalotes frigidus (Kempf, 1960)
- Cephalotes goeldii (Forel, 1912)
- Cephalotes goniodontes De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes grandinosus (Smith, 1860)
- Cephalotes guayaki De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes haemorrhoidalis (Latreille, 1802)
- Cephalotes hamulus (Roger, 1863)
- Cephalotes hirsutus De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes hispaniolicus De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes inaequalis (Mann, 1916)
- Cephalotes inca (Santschi, 1911)
- Cephalotes incertus (Emery, 1906)
- Cephalotes insularis (Wheeler, 1934)
- Cephalotes integerrimus (Vierbergen & Scheven, 1995)
- Cephalotes jamaicensis (Forel, 1922)
- Cephalotes jansei (Vierbergen & Scheven, 1995)
- Cephalotes jheringi (Emery, 1894)
- Cephalotes klugi (Emery, 1894)
- Cephalotes kukulcan Snelling, 1999
- Cephalotes laminatus (Smith, 1860)
- Cephalotes lanuginosus (Santschi, 1919)
- Cephalotes lenca De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes liepini De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes liogaster (Santschi, 1916)
- Cephalotes maculatus (Smith, 1876)
- Cephalotes manni (Kempf, 1951)
- Cephalotes marginatus (Fabricius, 1804)
- Cephalotes maya De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes membranaceus (Klug, 1824)
- Cephalotes minutus (Fabricius, 1804)
- Cephalotes mompox De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes multispinosus (Norton, 1868)
- Cephalotes nilpiei De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes notatus (Mayr, 1866)
- Cephalotes obscurus (Vierbergen & Scheven, 1995)
- Cephalotes oculatus (Spinola, 1851)
- Cephalotes olmecus De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes opacus Santschi, 1920
- Cephalotes pallens (Klug, 1824)
- Cephalotes pallidicephalus (Smith, 1876)
- Cephalotes pallidoides De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes pallidus De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes palta De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes palustris De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes patei (Kempf, 1951)
- Cephalotes patellaris (Mayr, 1866)
- Cephalotes pavonii (Latreille, 1809)
- Cephalotes pellans De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes persimilis De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes persimplex De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes peruviensis De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes pileini De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes pilosus (Emery, 1896)
- Cephalotes pinelii (Guerin-Meneville, 1844)
- Cephalotes placidus (Smith, 1860)
- Cephalotes poinari Baroni Urbani, 1999
- Cephalotes porrasi (Wheeler, 1942)[3]
- Cephalotes prodigiosus (Santschi, 1921)
- Cephalotes pusillus (Klug, 1824)
- Cephalotes quadratus (Mayr, 1868)
- Cephalotes ramiphilus (Forel, 1904)
- Cephalotes resinae De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes rohweri (Wheeler, 1916)
- Cephalotes scutulatus (Smith, 1867)
- Cephalotes serraticeps (Smith, 1858)
- Cephalotes serratus (Vierbergen & Scheven, 1995)
- Cephalotes setulifer (Emery, 1894)
- Cephalotes simillimus (Kempf, 1951)
- Cephalotes sobrius (Kempf, 1958)
- Cephalotes solidus (Kempf, 1974)
- Cephalotes specularis Brandão et al., 2014
- Cephalotes spinosus (Mayr, 1862)
- Cephalotes squamosus (Vierbergen & Scheven, 1995)
- Cephalotes sucinus De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes supercilii De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes taino De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes targionii (Emery, 1894)
- Cephalotes texanus (Santschi, 1915)
- Cephalotes toltecus De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes trichophorus De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes umbraculatus (Fabricius, 1804)
- Cephalotes unimaculatus (Smith, 1853)
- Cephalotes ustus (Kempf, 1973)
- Cephalotes varians (Smith, 1876)
- Cephalotes ventriosus De Andrade, 1999
- Cephalotes vinosus (Wheeler, 1936)
- Cephalotes wheeleri (Forel, 1901)
Ecological specialization and evolution of a soldier caste
One of the most important aspects of the genus' social evolution and adaptation is the manner in which their social organization has been shaped by environmental pressures.[4] This is particularly true of the species Cephalotes rohweri, in which an entire soldier class has evolved as a result of highly specialized nest cavity availability.[5]
Because ants within Cephalotes use multiple carved nesting cavities found in the trees upon which they live, a cohort of morphologically specialized soldiers has evolved to defend these nesting cavities. They use their unique plate-like heads to block the entrances to the nests, essentially creating a living door to the nest cavities.[5]
In one particular study, Scott Powell tested the current hypothesis that "specialized use of cavities with entrances close to the area of one ant head has selected for a morphologically and behaviorally specialized soldier in Cephalotes." This was accomplished by performing comparative studies between four Cephalotes species, each representing one of the four character states of soldier evolution.[5] Cephalotes was ideal for the study because it is the only genus to contain extant species displaying four levels of major morphological evolution.[5] These character states are:
- No soldier present (ancestral)
- Soldiers present with simple domed head
- Soldiers present with incomplete head-disk
- Soldiers present with complete head disk (most advanced)
Another study by Powell examined the process by which environmental factors shape colonial castes within the worker class. However, this study focused more on how colonies adapt their caste systems to ecological factors in their environment.[6]
For the experiment, a species of the Cephalotes genus was used that displayed the highest level of soldier specialization. Three key findings regarding adaptive caste specialization were supported:
- Soldiers were best at defending the specific nesting resource found in nature.
- Colonies used only certain nests (out of all the available nests), and selected only the nesting sites that would maximize soldier performance.
- Soldier performance and limitations had both direct and indirect effects on colony reproduction.[6]
The results of this experiment support the concept that the most specialized soldier phenotype in Cephalotes is a result of adaptation to ecological specialization within a narrow subset of available nests [6]
See also
- Aphantochilus, a genus of crab spiders known to mimic Cephalotes species
References
- ↑ Latreille, P.A. (1802). Histoire naturelle, generale et particuliere des crustaces et des insectes. Vol. 3. (PDF). Paris: F. Dufart.
- ↑ Yanoviak, S. P.; Munk, Y.; Dudley, R. (2011). "Evolution and Ecology of Directed Aerial Descent in Arboreal Ants" (PDF). Integrative and Comparative Biology. 51 (6): 944–956. doi:10.1093/icb/icr006. PMID 21562023.
- 1 2 Wild, Alex (11 November 2015). "Ants use their flattened heads as doors to lock down their nests". New Scientist. Retrieved 18 November 2015.
- ↑ Hölldobler, B., Wilson, E. O., & Nelson, M. C. (2009). The superorganism: the beauty, elegance, and strangeness of insect societies. New York: W.W. Norton.
- 1 2 3 4 Powell, S. (2008). Ecological specialization and the evolution of a specialized caste in Cephalotes ant. Functional Ecology, 22, 902-911.
- 1 2 3 Powell, S. (2009). How ecology shapes caste evolution: linking resource use, morphology, performance and fitness in a superorganism. Evolutionary Biology, 22, 1004-1013.
External links
- Media related to Cephalotes at Wikimedia Commons