Jump to content

Azteca muelleri

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Tom.Reding (talk | contribs) at 15:54, 24 October 2020 (Category:CS1 errors: deprecated parameters & WP:TOL cleanup; WP:GenFixes on). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Azteca muelleri
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hymenoptera
Family: Formicidae
Subfamily: Dolichoderinae
Genus: Azteca
Species:
A. muelleri
Binomial name
Azteca muelleri
Emery, 1893[1]
Synonyms
  • Azteca brunni
  • Azteca gibbifera
  • Azteca janeirensis
  • Azteca nigella
  • Azteca nigridens
  • Azteca wacketi

Azteca muelleri is a species of ant in the genus Azteca. Described by the Italian entomologist Carlo Emery in 1893, the species is native to Central and South America.[2] It lives in colonies in the hollow trunk and branches of Cecropia trees. The specific name muelleri was given in honour of a German biologist Fritz Müller, who discovered that the small bodies at the petiole-bases of Cecropia are food bodies.

Distribution and habitat

This ant is found in Central America and as far south as southern Brazil and eastern Peru, at altitudes of up to 1,800 m (6,000 ft). It occurs in rainforest and semi-deciduous forests where it is an obligate symbiont of Cecropia trees, often Cecropia glaziovii, Cecropia angustifolia,[1] or Cecropia pachystachya.[3]

Ecology

Azteca muelleri forms a spongy nest in cavities inside the trunk and branches of a Cecropia tree. This is a mutualistic arrangement as the ants defend the tree against herbivorous animals while the ants benefit from food bodies provided by the tree.[4]

A. muelleri is very aggressive. Another insect that also lives in the hollow twigs and branches of C. pachystachya is the beetle Coelomera ruficornis. This beetle can co-exist on a single host tree with the ant Azteca alfari, but A. muelleri removes or drives away the beetles on its host tree, with larger colonies of A muelleri able to locate and expel the beetles faster than small colonies can.[3]

There is competition for resources between A. alfari and A. muelleri. Typically, A. alfari is the first to colonise a young Cecropia sapling, perhaps by the roadside or in a clearing, as these trees are pioneering species. As the young tree grows, A. alfari tends to occupy the tips of the branches and abandons the cavities in the larger branches; the colonies have multiple queens and a number of separate colonies come to occupy the same tree. In contrast, A. muelleri may colonise the tree at a later stage in its growth; it has a central nest in the trunk of the tree, where the brood is reared, but maintains passageways to the branch tips. The tree provides Müllerian bodies on the leaf stalks, which provide food for the ants.[5]

References

  1. ^ a b "Azteca muelleri". AntWeb. Retrieved 18 May 2020.
  2. ^ Emery, C. 1893. Studio monografico sul genere Azteca Forel. Mem. R. Accad. Sci. Ist. Bologna (5)3:119-152
  3. ^ a b Rocha, Carlos Frederico Duarte & Bergallo, Helena Godoy (1992). "Bigger ant colonies reduce herbivory and herbivore residence time on leaves of an ant-plant: Azteca muelleri vs. Coelomera ruficornis on Cecropia pachystachya". Oecologia. 91: 249–252. doi:10.1007/BF00317792.
  4. ^ Hogue, Charles Leonard (1993). Latin American Insects and Entomology. University of California Press. pp. 450–451. ISBN 978-0-520-07849-9.
  5. ^ Nadkarni, Nalini M. & Wheelwright, Nathaniel T. (2000). Monteverde: Ecology and Conservation of a Tropical Cloud Forest. Oxford University Press, USA. pp. 292–293. ISBN 978-0-19-513310-3.