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<Emphasis Type="Italic">Gnamptogenys hartmani</Emphasis> Wheeler (Ponerinae: Ectatommini): an agro-predator of<Emphasis Type="Italic"> Trachymyrmex</Emphasis> and<Emphasis Type="Italic"> Sericomyrmex</Emphasis> fungus-growing ants
Authors:Email author" target="_blank">Michiel?B?DijkstraEmail author  Jacobus?J?Boomsma
Institution:(1) Department of Population Ecology, Zoological Institute, Universitetsparken 15, 2100 Copenhagen, Denmark
Abstract:The fungus gardens of fungus-growing ants are a potentially valuable resource for exploitation by natural enemies, but few of these antagonistic interactions have been studied. Here we describe key aspects of the behavioral ecology of Gnamptogenys hartmani (Ponerinae: Ectatommini), a specialized ldquoagro-predatorrdquo of Trachymyrmex and Sericomyrmex fungus-growing ants in Panama. Raiding columns of G. hartmani attack and usurp nests with remarkably little effort: a few intruding workers are sufficient to cause panic among the attine ants and make them abscond from the nest. Both G. hartmani larvae and adults consume the fungus and the host brood, after which the colony migrates to a new fungus-growing ant nest discovered by scouting workers. The morphology of the G. hartmani larval mouthparts is similar to that of Gnamptogenys species with a non-fungal diet. However, we suggest that the presence of long spinules on the larval mandibles in the genus Gnamptogenys, comparable to those found in attine larvae, may have pre-adapted G. hartmani to fungus eating. G. hartmani workers do not actively maintain or modify fungus gardens, which makes them less efficient exploiters than Megalomyrmex, the only other agro-predatory ant species known so far.
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