Acromyrmex ameliae
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''Acromyrmex ameliae'' is a species of New World ants of the
subfamily In biological classification, a subfamily (Latin: ', plural ') is an auxiliary (intermediate) taxonomic rank, next below family but more inclusive than genus. Standard nomenclature rules end subfamily botanical names with "-oideae", and zoologi ...
Myrmicinae Myrmicinae is a subfamily of ants, with about 140 extant genera; their distribution is cosmopolitan. The pupae lack cocoons. Some species retain a functional sting. The petioles of Myrmicinae consist of two nodes. The nests are permanent and ...
. This species is from one of the two genera of advanced fungus-growing ants within the tribe Attini. It is found in the wild naturally in South America in Minas Gerais, Brasil. ''Acromyrmex ameliae'' is a social parasite with much smaller reproductives (females and males) than those of its hosts ''A. subterraneus subterraneus'' and ''A. s. brunneus'' . Morphometrically, the ''A. ameliae'' queen is not a simple miniature of its hosts' queens, like '' Myrmica microrubra'' and its host '' Myrmica rubra''. The species can be distinguish from the host using its propodeal spines: they are straight and laterally compressed unlike ''A. subterraneus'' subspecies, where they are slight to strongly curved and conical. ''A. ameliae'' differs from '' Acromyrmex insinuator'' (another social parasite) not only by its size and color (brown dark against yellowish-orange), but also it does not present a single strong median ruga extending from the central ocellus to the level of the posterior borders of lateral ocelli, like ''A. insinuator''. On the contrary, around its central ocellus, the cuticle is wholly rugous without a distinct median ruga. In ''A. insinuator'', the anteroventral edge of the postpetiole is broadly and evenly concave, without a broad median anteroventral extension. The anteroventral portion of the postpetiole in ''A. ameliae'' has irregular extensions, without the concavity present in the first species. As in ''A. insinuator'', reproductives of ''A. ameliae'' very much resemble the host species, although with a pronounced reduction in body size. From observations of nuptial flights that occurred in the laboratory, a mating flight is suspected to occur in the wild, but are yet to observed. Alate parasites are found in two different seasons (April and October), unlike the host species, which has only a single synchronized nuptial flight per year in November and December. More than one nuptial flight each year could increase the likelihood of successful invasion of new colonies by ''A. ameliae''. The well-defined nuptial flight of the hosts is normally observed in November and December so that newly fertilized parasite ''A. ameliae'' queens (produced in April) can colonize established colonies of ''A. s. subterraneus'' and ''A. s. brunneus'' well before they reproduce themselves. Like ''A. insinuator'', ''A. ameliae'' is one of the rare inquiline parasites that produces workers and resembles its host in morphology, but unlike ''A. insinuator'', ''A. ameliae'' queens differ dramatically from their host queen in size. In all colonies of ''A. subterraneus'' sampled in ''A. ameliae'' range, all of them were parasitized by ''A. ameliae''. Thus, ''A. ameliae'' appears to be very common, yet until recently has been overlooked, suggesting the possibility that many other species of social parasites exist that have yet to be identified. As in ''A. insinuator'', ''A. ameliae'' produces a workforce that is essential for the production of the parasite alates, but this trait is being selected against over evolutionary time, although it has not yet been lost.


See also

* List of leafcutter ants


References

{{Taxonbar, from=Q1943461 Acromyrmex Insects described in 2007 Hymenoptera of South America