Fungus-growing ants (tribe Attini) comprise all the known
fungus
A fungus (: fungi , , , or ; or funguses) is any member of the group of eukaryotic organisms that includes microorganisms such as yeasts and mold (fungus), molds, as well as the more familiar mushrooms. These organisms are classified as one ...
-growing
ant
Ants are Eusociality, eusocial insects of the Family (biology), family Formicidae and, along with the related wasps and bees, belong to the Taxonomy (biology), order Hymenoptera. Ants evolved from Vespoidea, vespoid wasp ancestors in the Cre ...
species participating in
ant–fungus mutualism. They are known for cutting grasses and leaves, carrying them to their colonies' nests, and using them to grow fungus on which they later feed.
Their farming habits typically have large effects on their surrounding ecosystem. Many species farm large areas surrounding their colonies and leave walking trails that compress the soil, which can no longer grow plants. Attine colonies commonly have millions of individuals, though some species only house a few hundred.
They are the sister group to the subtribe
Dacetina.
Leafcutter ants, including ''
Atta'' and ''
Acromyrmex'', make up two of the genera.
Their cultivars mostly come from the fungal tribe
Leucocoprineae of family
Agaricaceae.
Attine gut
microbiota is often not diverse due to their primarily monotonous diets, leaving them at a higher risk than other beings for certain illnesses. They are especially at risk of death if their colony's fungus garden is affected by disease, as it is most often the only food source used for developing larvae. Many species of ants, including several ''
Megalomyrmex'', invade fungus-growing ant colonies and either steal from and destroy these fungus gardens, or they live in the nest and take food from the species.
Fungus-growing ants are only found in the
Western Hemisphere
The Western Hemisphere is the half of the planet Earth that lies west of the Prime Meridian (which crosses Greenwich, London, United Kingdom) and east of the 180th meridian.- The other half is called the Eastern Hemisphere. Geopolitically, ...
. Some species stretch as far north as the
pine barrens in
New Jersey, USA (''
Trachymyrmex septentrionalis'') and as far south as the
cold deserts in
Argentina
Argentina, officially the Argentine Republic, is a country in the southern half of South America. It covers an area of , making it the List of South American countries by area, second-largest country in South America after Brazil, the fourt ...
(several species of ''Acromyrmex'').
This
New World
The term "New World" is used to describe the majority of lands of Earth's Western Hemisphere, particularly the Americas, and sometimes Oceania."America." ''The Oxford Companion to the English Language'' (). McArthur, Tom, ed., 1992. New York: ...
ant
clade
In biology, a clade (), also known as a Monophyly, monophyletic group or natural group, is a group of organisms that is composed of a common ancestor and all of its descendants. Clades are the fundamental unit of cladistics, a modern approach t ...
is thought to have originated about 60 million years ago in the
South America
South America is a continent entirely in the Western Hemisphere and mostly in the Southern Hemisphere, with a considerably smaller portion in the Northern Hemisphere. It can also be described as the southern Subregion#Americas, subregion o ...
n
rainforest
Rainforests are forests characterized by a closed and continuous tree Canopy (biology), canopy, moisture-dependent vegetation, the presence of epiphytes and lianas and the absence of wildfire. Rainforests can be generally classified as tropi ...
. This is disputed, though, as they could have possibly evolved in a drier habitat while still evolving to
domesticate their crops.
Evolution
Early ancestors of attine ants were probably
insect predators. They likely began foraging for leaf sections, but then converted their primary food source to the
fungus
A fungus (: fungi , , , or ; or funguses) is any member of the group of eukaryotic organisms that includes microorganisms such as yeasts and mold (fungus), molds, as well as the more familiar mushrooms. These organisms are classified as one ...
these leaf cuts grew.
Higher attines, such as ''
Acromyrmex'' and ''
Atta'', are believed to have evolved in Central and North America about 20 million years ago (Mya), starting with ''
Trachymyrmex cornetzi.'' While the fungal cultivars of the 'lower' attine ants can survive outside an ant colony, those of 'higher' attine ants are obligate mutualists, meaning they cannot exist without one another.
Generalized fungus farming in ants appears to have evolved about 55–60 Mya, but early 25 Mya ants seemed to have domesticated a single fungal lineage with
gongylidia to feed colonies. This evolution of using gongylidia appears to have developed in the dry habitats of South America, away from the rainforests where fungus-farming evolved.
About 10 million years later, leaf-cutting ants likely arose as active
herbivore
A herbivore is an animal anatomically and physiologically evolved to feed on plants, especially upon vascular tissues such as foliage, fruits or seeds, as the main component of its diet. These more broadly also encompass animals that eat ...
s and began industrial-scaled farming.
The fungus the ants grew, their cultivars eventually became
reproductively isolated and co-evolved with the ants. These fungi gradually began decomposing more nutritious material like fresh plants.
Shortly after attine ants began keeping their fungus gardens in dense aggregations, their farms likely began suffering from a specialized genus of ''
Escovopsis'' mycopathogens.
The ants evolved cuticular cultures of
Actinomycetota
The Actinomycetota (or Actinobacteria) are a diverse phylum of Gram-positive bacteria with high GC content. They can be terrestrial or aquatic. They are of great importance to land flora because of their contributions to soil systems. In soil t ...
that suppress ''Escovopsis'' and possibly other bacteria.
These cuticular cultures are both
antibiotic
An antibiotic is a type of antimicrobial substance active against bacteria. It is the most important type of antibacterial agent for fighting pathogenic bacteria, bacterial infections, and antibiotic medications are widely used in the therapy ...
s and
antifungal
An antifungal medication, also known as an antimycotic medication, is a pharmaceutical fungicide or fungistatic used to treat and prevent mycosis such as athlete's foot, ringworm, candidiasis (thrush), serious systemic infections such as ...
s.
The mature worker ants wear these cultures on their chest plates and sometimes on their surrounding thoraces and legs as a
biofilm
A biofilm is a Syntrophy, syntrophic Microbial consortium, community of microorganisms in which cell (biology), cells cell adhesion, stick to each other and often also to a surface. These adherent cells become embedded within a slimy ext ...
.
Behavior
Mating

Typically, one queen lives per colony. Every year after the colony is about three years old, the queen lays eggs of female and male
alates, the reproductive ants that will pass on the genes of the queens. Before leaving the nest, queens stuff some of the fungus'
mycelia
Mycelium (: mycelia) is a root-like structure of a fungus consisting of a mass of branching, thread-like hyphae. Its normal form is that of branched, slender, entangled, anastomosing, hyaline threads. Fungal colonies composed of mycelium are fo ...
in her
cibarium. These winged males and queens then take their
nuptial flights to mate high in the air. In some areas, species flights are synchronized with all local colonies' virgin royalty flying at the same time on the same day, such as ''
Atta sexdens'' and ''
Atta texana''.
Some species' queens mate with only one male, as in ''
Seriomyrmex'' and ''
Trachymyrmex'', while some are known to mate with as many as eight or 10, such as ''Atta sexdens'' and many'' Acromyrmex'' spp. After mating, all males die, but their sperm stays alive and usable for a long time in the
spermatheca
The spermatheca (pronounced : spermathecae ), also called ''receptaculum seminis'' (: ''receptacula seminis''), is an organ of the female reproductive tract in insects, e.g. ants, bees, some molluscs, Oligochaeta worms and certain other in ...
, or sperm bank, of their mate, meaning that many ants father offspring years after their death.
Colony foundation
After their mating flights, queens cast off their wings and begin their descent into the ground. After creating a narrow entrance and digging straight down, she creates a small chamber. In here, she spits on a small wad of fungus and starts her colony's garden.
After about three days, fresh mycelia are growing out of the fungus wad and the queen has lain three to six eggs. In a month, the colony has eggs, larvae, and often pupae surrounding the ever-growing garden.
Until the first workers are grown, the queen is the sole worker. She grows the garden, fertilizing it with her fecal liquid, but does not eat from it. Instead, she gains energy from eating 90% of the eggs she lays, in addition to catabolizing her wing muscles and fat reserves.
Though the first larvae feed on the eggs of the queen, the first workers begin growing and eating from the garden. Workers feed malformed eggs to the hungry larvae while the garden is still fragile. After about a week of this underground growth, workers open the closed entrance and begin foraging, staying close to the nest. The fungus begins growing at a much faster rate [] an hour. From this point on, the only work the queen does is egg-laying.
Colonies grow slowly for the first two years of existence, but then accelerate for the next three years. After around five years, growth levels out and the colony begins to produce winged males and queens.
The founding of a nest by these queens is highly difficult, and successful cases are not likely. After three months, newly founded colonies of ''
Atta capiguara'' and ''Atta sexdens'' are 0.09% and 2.53% likely to still exist, respectively. Some species have better odds, such as ''
Atta cephalotes'', which are 10% likely to survive a few months.
Caste system
Attines have seven castes performing roughly 20–30 tasks, meaning the potential exists for development of more specialized castes performing individual tasks for ''Atta''
's future.
For now, a reproductive caste, made of male drones and female queens, and a worker class, that vary greatly in size, are known.
Queens have much larger
ovaries
The ovary () is a gonad in the female reproductive system that produces ova; when released, an ovum travels through the fallopian tube/oviduct into the uterus. There is an ovary on the left and the right side of the body. The ovaries are endocr ...
than females in the working castes.
Since their needs are constantly taken care of, queens rarely move from a single location, which is typically in a centralized fungal garden. Workers take their eggs and move them to other fungal gardens.
Differences in size between worker castes begin to develop after a colony is well established.
Workers
Description
Lower attines have very minor
polymorphism within the minor workers, though higher attines commonly have very different sizes of worker ants.
In the higher attines, though, head width varies eight-fold and dry weight 200-fold between different castes of workers. The size differences in workers is nearly nonexistent in newly founded colonies.
Due to the variety of tasks needed to be performed by a colony, the widths of workers heads are important and good measures of what jobs workers are likely to perform. Those with the heads about wide tend to work as gardeners, although many with heads wide participate in brood care.
Workers need heads only about 0.8 mm wide to do the work of caring for the very delicate hyphae of the fungus, which they care for by stroking with their antennae and moving with their mouths. These tiny workers are the smallest and most abundant and are called minim. Ants of appear to be the smallest workers that cut vegetation, but they cannot cut very hard or thick leaves. Most foragers have heads around wide.
Attines, particularly the workers that cut leaves and grass, have large mandibles powered by strong muscles. On average, 50% of worker ants' head mass and 25% of their full body mass is the mandibular muscles alone.
Behavior
Though all castes defend their nests in the event of invasion, a true soldier caste, with individuals called majors, exists. They are larger than other workers, and use their large, sharp mandibles, powered by huge
adductor muscles, to defend their colonies from large enemies, such as
vertebrate
Vertebrates () are animals with a vertebral column (backbone or spine), and a cranium, or skull. The vertebral column surrounds and protects the spinal cord, while the cranium protects the brain.
The vertebrates make up the subphylum Vertebra ...
s. When a foraging area is threatened by
conspecific
Biological specificity is the tendency of a characteristic such as a behavior or a biochemical variation to occur in a particular species.
Biochemist Linus Pauling stated that "Biological specificity is the set of characteristics of living organism ...
or
interspecific ant competitor, the majority of respondents are smaller workers from other castes, since they are more numerous, and therefore better suited for
territorial
A territory is an area of land, sea, or space, belonging or connected to a particular country, person, or animal.
In international politics, a territory is usually a geographic area which has not been granted the powers of self-government, ...
combat.
Tasks are divided not only by size, but by the age of individuals workers, as well. Young workers of most subcastes tend to work inside the nest, but many older workers take on tasks outside. Minims, which are too small to cut or carry leaf fragments, are commonly found at foraging sites. They often ride from the foraging site to the nest by climbing onto the fragments carried by other workers. Most likely, they are older workers that defend carriers from
parasitic phorid flies that attempt to lay eggs on the backs of the foragers.

All size groups defend their colonies from invaders, but older workers have been found to attack and defend territories most often.
At least three of four physical castes of ''A. sexdens'' change their behavior based on their age.
Habitat
Lower attines mostly live in inconspicuous nests with 100–1000 individuals and relatively small fungus gardens in them. Higher attines, in contrast, live in colonies made of 5–10 million ants that live and work within hundreds of interconnected fungus-bearing chambers in huge subterranean
nests.
Some colonies are so large, they can be seen from
satellite photos, measuring up to .
Farming

The majority of fungi that are farmed by attine ants come from the family
Agaricaceae, mostly from the genera ''
Leucoagaricus'' and ''
Leucocoprinus'',
though variance occurs within the tribe. Some species in the genus ''
Apterostigma'' have changed their food source to fungi in the family
Tricholomataceae.
Some species cultivate
yeast
Yeasts are eukaryotic, single-celled microorganisms classified as members of the fungus kingdom (biology), kingdom. The first yeast originated hundreds of millions of years ago, and at least 1,500 species are currently recognized. They are est ...
, such as ''
Cyphomyrmex rimosus.''
Some fungi that have supposedly been vertically transmitted are believed to be millions of years old. It was previously assumed that the
cultures
Culture ( ) is a concept that encompasses the social behavior, institutions, and Social norm, norms found in human societies, as well as the knowledge, beliefs, arts, laws, Social norm, customs, capabilities, Attitude (psychology), attitudes ...
are always transmitted vertically from colony to young queen, but some lower attines have been found to be growing recently domesticated Lepiotaceae. Some species transfer cultures laterally, such as ''
Cyphomyrmex'' and occasionally some species of ''Acromyrmex'', whether by joining a neighboring tribe, stealing, or invading another colony's garden.

Lower attines do not use leaves for the majority of the substrate for their gardens, and instead prefer dead vegetation, seeds, fruits, insect feces, and corpses. The lower attine ant species ''
Mycocepurus goeldii'' has been found to farm ''
Leucocoprinus attinorum'' whilst the sand dwelling ''
Mycetophylax morschi'' farms the closely related species ''
Leucocoprinus dunensis.
''
''Apterostigma'' ''dentigerum'' cultivates ''
Myrmecopterula velohortorum'' in veiled hanging gardens whereas ''
Apterostigma manni'' cultivates ''
Myrmecopterula nudihortorum'' in spongelike masses in cavities in the ground or under logs.
Worker recruitment
The number of ants that are recruited to cut varies greatly based on the leaf quality available in addition to the species and location of the colony. Leaf quality is complex to measure because many variables exist, including "leaf tenderness, nutrient composition, and the presence and quantity of secondary plant chemicals" such as sugar.
Early studies found the pheromones used to mark foraging trails come from poison gland sacs. Studies suggest there are two purposes for marking the trails this way: worker recruitment and orientation cues.
The trail recruitment pheromone
methyl-4-methylpyrrole-2-carboxylate (MMPC), was the first whose chemical structure was identified. It is also the main trail recruitment pheromone in all ''Atta'' species except ''Atta sexdens'', which uses 3-ethyl-2,5-dimethylpyrazine.
MMPC is incredibly potent and effective at attracting ants. One milligram is theoretically powerful enough to create a path that ''A. texana'' and ''A. cephalotes'' would follow three times the
Earth's circumference
Earth's circumference is the distance around Earth. Measured around the equator, it is . Measured passing through the poles, the circumference is .
Treating the Earth as a sphere, its circumference would be its single most important measuremen ...
[] and that 50% of ''A. vollenweideri'' foragers would follow 60 times around the Earth [].
Harvesting vegetation
Most harvesting sites are in tree canopies or patches of savanna grasses.
After following the pheromone trail to vegetation, ants climb onto leaves or grass and begin cutting off sections. To do this, they place one mandible, called the fixed mandible, onto a leaf and anchor it. Then they open the other, called the motile mandible, and place it on the leaf tissue. The ant moves the motile jaw and pulls the fixed jaw behind it by closing them together until the fragment detaches. Which jaw is fixed and which is motile varies depending on the direction in which the ant chooses to cut a fragment.
The sizes of leaf fragments have been found in some studies to vary based on the size of ants due to the ants' anchoring of their
hind legs
A hindlimb or back limb is one of the paired articulated appendages ( limbs) attached on the caudal ( posterior) end of a terrestrial tetrapod vertebrate's torso.http://www.merriam-webster.com/medical/hind%20limb, Merriam Webster Dictionary-H ...
while cutting,
though other studies have not found
correlations. This is likely because many factors affect how ants cut leaves, including neck
flexibility
Stiffness is the extent to which an object resists deformation in response to an applied force.
The complementary concept is flexibility or pliability: the more flexible an object is, the less stiff it is.
Calculations
The stiffness, k, of a ...
,
body axis location, and leg length.
Load sizes that do not impact the running speed of the collecting ants are favored.
Often, ants stridulate while cutting vegetation by raising and lowering their gasters in a way that makes a cuticular file on the first gastric tergite and a scraper on the postpetiole rub together. This makes a noise, audible by people with great hearing sitting very close to them and visible using
laser-Doppler vibrometry.
It also causes the mandibles to move like a
vibratome and cut through tender leaf tissue more smoothly.
The
metabolic rate of the ants while and after cutting vegetation is above standard. Their aerobic scope is in the range of
flying insects, which are among the most metabolically active animals.
The behavior of the foragers that bring the material back to the nest varies greatly among species. In some species, especially those that harvest close to their nests, the harvesters bring the litter back to their colony themselves. Species such as ''A. colombica'' have one or more cache sites along a trail for foragers to grab litter. Other species, such as ''A. vollenweideri'', that carry leaves as far as , have two to five carriers per leaf. The first carrier takes the segment a short distance toward the nest and then drops it. Another picks it up and drops it, and this repeats until the last carrier brings it the greatest distance until reaching the nest.
Data does not show that this behavior maximizes load transportation, so scientists have explained this behavior in other ways, though the data are still inconclusive. One theory is that this type of task partitioning increases the efficiency of individual workers as they become specialists. Another is that the chains accelerate communication between ants about the quality and species of the plants being cut, recruits more workers, and reinforces territorial claims by reinforcing the scent markings.
Gardening process
First, foragers bring in to and drop leaf fragments on the nest's chamber floor. Workers that are usually slightly smaller clip these pieces into segments that are about across. Smaller ants then crush these fragments and mold them into damp pellets by adding fecal droplets and kneading them. They add the pellets into a larger pile of other prill.
Smaller workers then pluck loose strands of fungus from dense patches and plant them on the surface of the freshly made pile. The smallest workers, the minim, move around and keep up the garden by delicately prodding the piles with their antennae, licking the surfaces, and plucking out the spores and hyphae of unwanted mold species.
Nutrition
Higher attine fungi grow
gongylidia, which form clusters called staphylae. The staphylae are rich in
carbohydrate
A carbohydrate () is a biomolecule composed of carbon (C), hydrogen (H), and oxygen (O) atoms. The typical hydrogen-to-oxygen atomic ratio is 2:1, analogous to that of water, and is represented by the empirical formula (where ''m'' and ''n'' ...
s and
lipid
Lipids are a broad group of organic compounds which include fats, waxes, sterols, fat-soluble vitamins (such as vitamins A, D, E and K), monoglycerides, diglycerides, phospholipids, and others. The functions of lipids include storing ...
s. Though workers can also eat the
hypha
A hypha (; ) is a long, branching, filamentous structure of a fungus, oomycete, or actinobacterium. In most fungi, hyphae are the main mode of vegetative growth, and are collectively called a mycelium.
Structure
A hypha consists of one o ...
e of the fungi, which is richer in
protein
Proteins are large biomolecules and macromolecules that comprise one or more long chains of amino acid residue (biochemistry), residues. Proteins perform a vast array of functions within organisms, including Enzyme catalysis, catalysing metab ...
, they prefer staphylae and appear to live longer while eating them.
Cellulose
Cellulose is an organic compound with the chemical formula, formula , a polysaccharide consisting of a linear chain of several hundred to many thousands of glycosidic bond, β(1→4) linked glucose, D-glucose units. Cellulose is an important s ...
has been found to be poorly degraded and assimilated by fungus, if at all, meaning that the ants that eat the fungus do not get much energy from the cellulose in plants.
Xylan
Xylan (; ) ( CAS number: 9014-63-5) is a type of hemicellulose, a polysaccharide consisting mainly of xylose residues. It is found in plants, in the secondary cell walls of dicots and all cell walls of grasses. Xylan is the third most abu ...
,
starch
Starch or amylum is a polymeric carbohydrate consisting of numerous glucose units joined by glycosidic bonds. This polysaccharide is produced by most green plants for energy storage. Worldwide, it is the most common carbohydrate in human diet ...
,
maltose
}
Maltose ( or ), also known as maltobiose or malt sugar, is a disaccharide formed from two units of glucose joined with an α(1→4) bond. In the isomer isomaltose, the two glucose molecules are joined with an α(1→6) bond. Maltose is the tw ...
,
sucrose
Sucrose, a disaccharide, is a sugar composed of glucose and fructose subunits. It is produced naturally in plants and is the main constituent of white sugar. It has the molecular formula .
For human consumption, sucrose is extracted and refined ...
,
laminarin, and
glycoside
In chemistry, a glycoside is a molecule in which a sugar is bound to another functional group via a glycosidic bond. Glycosides play numerous important roles in living organisms. Many plants store chemicals in the form of inactive glycosides. ...
apparently play the important roles in ant nutrition. It is not known yet how ants can digest laminarin, but
myrmecologists E.O. Wilson and
Bert Hölldobler hypothesize that fungal
enzyme
An enzyme () is a protein that acts as a biological catalyst by accelerating chemical reactions. The molecules upon which enzymes may act are called substrate (chemistry), substrates, and the enzyme converts the substrates into different mol ...
s may occur in the ants' guts, as evidenced by the enzymes found in larval extract.
In a laboratory experiment, only 5% of workers' energy needs were met by fungal staphylae, and the ants also feed on
tree sap as they collect greens. Larvae seem to grow on all or nearly all fungi, whereas queens obtain their energy from the eggs nonqueen females lay and workers feed to them.
Bacterial symbionts
The
actinomycete bacterium ''
Pseudonocardia'' is acquired by pupae from the workers that care for them two days after pupae eclose for
metamorphosis
Metamorphosis is a biological process by which an animal physically develops including birth transformation or hatching, involving a conspicuous and relatively abrupt change in the animal's body structure through cell growth and different ...
. Within 14 days, the ants are covered in the bacteria, where they are stored in crypts and cavities found in the exoskeletons. The bacteria produce small molecules that can prevent the growth of a specialized fungus garden pathogen.
Attine ants have very specialized diets, which seem to reduce their
microbiotic diversity.
Impact of farming
The scale of the farming done by fungus-farming ants can be compared to human's industrialized farming.
A colony can "
efoliatea mature
eucalyptus tree overnight".
The cutting of leaves to grow fungus to feed millions of ants per colony has a large ecological impact in the
subtropical
The subtropical zones or subtropics are geographical zone, geographical and Köppen climate classification, climate zones immediately to the Northern Hemisphere, north and Southern Hemisphere, south of the tropics. Geographically part of the Ge ...
areas in which they reside.
Genera
*''
Acanthognathus''
*''
Acromyrmex''
*''
Allomerus''
*''
Amoimyrmex''
*''
Apterostigma''
*''
Atta''
*†''
Attaichnus'' (
trace fossil
A trace fossil, also called an ichnofossil (; ), is a fossil record of biological activity by lifeforms, but not the preserved remains of the organism itself. Trace fossils contrast with body fossils, which are the fossilized remains of part ...
)
*''
Basiceros''
*''
Blepharidatta''
*''
Cephalotes
''Cephalotes'' is a genus of tree-dwelling ant species from the Americas, 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 t ...
''
*''
Chimaeridris
''Chimaeridris'' is a small genus of ants in the subfamily Myrmicinae. The genus contains two species known from tropical Asia. Their unique hook-shaped mandibles and similar appearance to ''Pheidole'' minor workers raises the possibility that th ...
''
*''
Colobostruma''
*''
Cyatta''
*''
Cyphomyrmex''
*''
Daceton''
*''
Diaphoromyrma''
*''
Epopostruma''
*''
Eurhopalothrix''
*''
Ishakidris''
*''
Kalathomyrmex''
*''
Lachnomyrmex''
*''
Lenomyrmex''
*''
Mesostruma''
*''
Microdaceton''
*''
Mycetagroicus''
*''
Mycetarotes''
*''
Mycetomoellerius''
*''
Mycetophylax''
*''
Mycetosoritis''
*''
Mycocepurus''
*''
Myrmicocrypta''
*''
Ochetomyrmex''
*''
Octostruma''
*''
Orectognathus''
*''
Paramycetophylax''
*''
Phalacromyrmex''
*''
Pheidole''
*''
Pilotrochus''
*''
Procryptocerus''
*''
Protalaridris''
*''
Pseudoatta''
*''
Rhopalothrix''
*''
Sericomyrmex''
*''
Strumigenys''
*''
Talaridris''
*''
Trachymyrmex''
*''
Tranopelta''
*''
Wasmannia''
*''
Xerolitor''
See also
*
Ant–fungus mutualism
*
Fungus-growing termites
*
List of leafcutter ants
*
Leucoagaricus gongylophorus
*
Myrmecopterula
References
Cited texts
* Hölldobler, Bert and Wilson, EO. (2009). ''The Superorganism: The Beauty, Elegance, and Strangeness of Insect Societies''. W. W. Norton & Company.
External links
*
{{Taxonbar, from=Q1938502
Myrmicinae
Extant Paleocene first appearances