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Communication in the primitive cryptobiotic ant Prionopelta amabilis (Hymenoptera: Formicidae)
Authors:B. Hölldobler  M. Obermayer  E. O. Wilson
Affiliation:(1) Theodor Boveri Institut, Lehrstuhl Tierphysiologie der Universitat, Würzburg, Germany;(2) Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass., USA
Abstract:Summary The Neotropical ant Prionopelta amabilis, a cryptobiotic species in the phylogenetically primitive tribe Amblyoponini, lives in subterranean habitats, where it preys preferentially on campodeid diplurans and other small arthropods. Here we report that the species employs chemical recruitment and orientation trails during foraging and nest emigrations. The trail pheromone originates in a hitherto unknown basitarsal gland located in the basitarsus of the hindlegs. Trails are laid by a special foot dragging behavior. During the recruitment process the chemical trail signal is complemented by body shaking on the part of the recruiting ant. Foragers frequently wipe the basitarsal gland opening in the hindlegs with the grooming apparatus of the front legs. This latter structure is equipped with unusual glands evidently specialized for this purpose.
Keywords:Ants  Ponerinae  Prionopelta  Communication  Pheromones
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