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Polyergus

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Polyergus
Polyergus rufescens worker
Scientific classification
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Genus:
Polyergus

Latreille, 1804
Type species
Formica rufescens[1]
Diversity[2]
14 species

Polyergus, also called Amazon ants,[3] is a small genus of 14 described species of "slave-raiding" ants. Its workers are incapable of caring for brood, in part due to their dagger-like, piercing mandibles, but more importantly, because in the evolution of their parasitism on certain species of the host genus Formica, they have lost the "behavioral wiring" to carry out even rudimentary brood care, or even to feed themselves. Polyergus workers exist in essence as a specialized brood-acquiring caste in their mixed Polyergus/Formica colonies, maintaining the Formica worker force by robbing brood, especially pupae, of particular species in the closely related genus Formica in massive colony-to-colony raids. The captured ants are generally referred to as "slaves" in scientific and popular literature, though recent attempts have been made to apply other human cultural models, such as describing the Polyergus individuals of a colony as "raiders" or "pirates" or "kidnappers" and the Formica workers as "helper-ants", or "domesticated animals". Biologists describe the system as parasitism by "dulosis" (slavemaking) by Polyergus on the host Formica species.[citation needed]

Polyergus obtains its Formica work force by stealing pupae from nearby Formica colonies and carrying them back to its own nest. Back in the Polyergus nest, Formica workers are eventually helped to emerge from the cocoons and pupal exuvia by Formica workers already living there. The new workers quickly assimilate the characteristic odor of the mixed-species population of the Polyergus colony—without violence or coercion. The Formica workers that emerge in the mixed-species colony go on to nurse the brood, forage, maintain the nest, feed their adult captors and their mother the queen, and perform other colony upkeep duties.[citation needed]

As far as is known, all established Polyergus colonies have only one queen. However, many contain ergatoids, large, worker-like forms with large gasters. These may be substitute reproductive individuals after the queen's death, but this has not been proven. To found a new colony, a lone Polyergus queen invades a nest of the host species, or encounters and moves in with a colony-founding queen of the host species and her first few workers. In the latter case, the host queen is allowed to survive until her little colony has reared a sufficient number of host workers to support the parasite queen, something the Polyergus queen cannot do herself. A young Polyergus queen kills the existing Formica queen (immediately if sufficient workers are present, later if these are not yet reared) and becomes accepted by the Formica workers. These proceed to rear the first and all subsequent Polyergus brood. Clearly, this complicated and lengthy process often fails, as Polyergus colonies are relatively rare, though each mature colony produces dozens or hundreds of new potential queens each year. To counteract the natural mortality of the Formica worker population, Polyergus workers must conduct regular raids over a 6-8 week period, every summer over the 10- to 15-year lifespan of their colony.[4]

Polyergus lucidus returning from raid on Formica incerta: Three of the Formica ants already incorporated into the mixed colony are visible to the right of the nest entrance.

Species

lucidus group
rufescens group
  • Polyergus rufescens (Latreille, 1798) – all of Europe, to western China and Kazakhstan
  • Polyergus breviceps Emery, 1893 – north-central United States, west to Colorado, northern Arizona
  • Polyergus bicolor Wasmann, 1901 – Wisconsin and Michigan, United States, west to North Dakota and south-central Canada
  • Polyergus mexicanus Forel, 1899 – Dakotas and Arkansas, to western United States and Canada, and south at high altitude in mountains of Durango, Mexico.
  • Polyergus topoffi Trager, 2013 – high desert to mid-elevation mountains from Hidalgo, Mexico to southern Arizona, United States
  • Polyergus vinosus Trager, 2013 – southern California to northern Baja California, Mexico
samurai group
incertae sedis

References

  1. ^ "Genus: Polyergus". antweb.org. AntWeb. Retrieved 14 October 2013.
  2. ^ Bolton, B. (2014). "Polyergus". AntCat. Retrieved 17 July 2014.
  3. ^ Dobrzańska, J.; Dobrzański, J. (1989). "Controversies on the subject of slave-raids in amazon ants (genus Polyergus)". Acta Neurobiologiae Experimentalis. 49 (6): 367–79.
  4. ^ Trager, James C. "Global revision of the genus Polyergus", Zootaxa. Retrieved 24 October 2013.