Pages

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Backyard Ant Hills

Mounds of the Leaf-cutter Ant, Acromyrmex versicolor, left and right.  Middle: Smooth Harvester Ant Messor pergandei
In our backyard, numerous colonies of ants build structures that look like mini volcanoes: cone shaped mounds that rise out of the sandy soil complete with central craters. At first steep and well-shaped, they soon get flattened by erosion. Some sit alone, others in groups of two or three. In spring, there is always activity around those mounds: workers carrying material into the entrance and disappearing with it in the dark depth, or dropping their loads on the outside of the mound, forming a ring of plant material around it.

I must admit that I lived surrounded by those ants for years before it dawned on me that there were two very different species at work and the differences are quite apparent.

At one type of colonies, the single minded efforts of a never ending procession of ants result in an accumulation of fresh green, purple or silver plant clippings that sit there for a day and then disappear into the crater (top right). These are the leaf-cutter ants that I will describe in a later blog.

The plant material circling the other type of colonies looks old and discarded. The ring around the mound seems to be the permanent waste midden of the colony (above, middle).
 This is the work of the Smooth Harvester Ant Messor pergandei. In this and the following blog I will not describe the social structure of ant communities that both species have in common, but rather point out the most striking differences in the way of life in these two local crater-building species...

Messor pergandei, the Smooth Harvester Ant
 Messor pergandei ants are shiny, dark brown to black, the majority (workers) between 4 and 8 mm long. Their mounds are of modest height and usually around 20 to 30 cm wide. I find them in open, sandy areas, often along paths - there doesn't seem to be any particular requirement for shade or moisture and these ants can deal with very compacted soil.  The common name Harvester Ants refers to their striking behavior: workers are constantly carrying bits and pieces of plants to the mound, and they are choosing their material in a very organized way, clipping the heads of grasses when the seeds are fresh and juicy, switching to other seeds when those are in season....

Erodium cicutarium, Redstem Filaree
 In our desert surroundings a little plant in the Geranium family, Erodium cicutarium, also known as Redstem filaree, or Common Stork's-bill, is very common. It is an introduced, invasive Mediterranean species. Messor ants don't care. In early March, they prefer Filaree seeds over anything else. Filaree relies on ants for seed dispersal  (myrmecochory). As an incentive for the ants, a piece of sweet tissue (elaiosome) is firmly attached to each seed. The ants collect the diaspores (seeds plus elaiosomes) and carry them to their nests.

Workers were bringing seeds with their spiraled attachments from all over and carriwd them into the dark entrance hole of the colony. Other pieces that were brought up from the inside and then tossed over the crater's rim to end up on the colony midden. These are just the inedible parts, which include the intact seed. The sweet elaiosomes have been removed and  remain in the under-ground granaries of the colony.  


Messor ants like Erodium diaspores so much that most middens that I checked in March 2012 consisted of nothing else. This raises the question whether seed dispersal is actually achieved. While the seeds are removed from the mother plant, they still end up in dense piles, exposed to elements and rodents. If this is a glitch in the system, it's probably because Erodium and Messa really didn't co-evolve. I would like to observe the behavior of local ants in the Mediterranean home countries of the plant. But, alas, when I studied insects in Yugoslavia, Greece, and Italy, ants were not very high on my list. However, if the spread of Erodium in our backyard and the adjoining state land is any indication, it's a successful symbiosis, even here in Arizona.

Veromessor pergandei refuse heap in October after a good monsoon: hulls of cheat grass seeds are rejected and piled around the nest entrance
The big colonies of Messor pergandei are very active right now. The ants become nearly invisible during our 'dry heat; times from May to the beginning of July when the first monsoon storms trigger the mating flights of thousands of winged males following the young aleate queens on their bridal flight. The emergence of so many insect often looks like rising smoke. That is the time when suddenly hundreds of dragonflies hunt over the dry desert and bats dance over our house at dusk.
Messor pergandaei queen
Last year one of the queens shed her wings and wandered into my studio. When she was identified as a Harvester Ant I was apprehensive: my only experience had been with our other Harvester Ants in the genus 
 Pogonomyrmex, and that was the most painful insect encounter I can remember (and I have been attacked by fireants in Florida)

Pogonomyrmex sp. nest and worker
 But there is no Pogonomyrmex colony close to our house.  Local Pogonomyrmex nests look like nothing else: a more or less bare spot of several square yards with paths radiating away from an entrance hole somewhere off-center. I push my pant legs into my socks when I'm around these places. Messor ants on the other hand are so unagressive that I don't even know whether they can sting even though I have been on hands and knees with my video camera at their nest sites quite often.

P.s. the Genus name Messor has been changed to Veromessor for the US species since I wrote this entry


5 comments:

  1. Very nice Margarethe
    (actually had to scroll up and spell check your name - not use to the 'he' being on the end - LOL)

    I loved watching the ants every year at my place. Some of those look like some of the area's native Harvester Ants. Do you ever notice the Horned Toad Lizards around feeding on them ? In the spring at my place in Anza, both the Red & the Black Harvester Ant Queens and Drones came out in mass by the thousands and mated. The horned Lizards somehow picked up on this and came out from hiding to have a meal.

    Sometimes I would see these lizards close to a Red Ant colony hill or mound like those in your pictures. He'd sit there and gobble up any ant that came near him. Sometimes groups of the Harvester ants would try and attack him but he was so well plated, even his eye lids are armor plated.


    I notice you have a spring sprouted Filare, have you ever added them to a salad ? They're actually good.

    Thanks for another post.

    Kevin

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hi Kevin, thanks!
    I will try the filare, it has a pleasant aroma, and it's everywhere. The regal horned lizards live of the Smooth Harvester Ants in our yard, we don't have any Pogonomyrmex species right here. But there are studies how they can deal with the poison. I devoted an earlier blog to the lizards: http://arizonabeetlesbugsbirdsandmore.blogspot.com/2011/06/its-lizard-not-toad.html

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I know the harvester ants where I lived in Southern California have a nasty sting that works it's way to the lymph areas as a sore pain. I always assumed that these Horn Lizards had a Mexican passion for heat and it must be like eating one Habenero Pepper after another with no ill effects. LOL

      BTW, California's problem with Argentine Ants (which is horrible) is also a problem for the native Harvester ants who can become obliterated by an Argentine Ant attack. It dominos from there with the food supply for Horned Toads taking a hit which in turn hurts the lizards.

      I also just followed the link you gave about the Horned Lizards. Great info and pics. Also I use to see the baby Horned Lizards when they came out from hiding. Never have experienced an eye witnesses blood squirt event.

      On another note, I also think baby Scorpians are cute riding on their mother's back. But then I'm someone who when I first moved up to Idyllwild CA from San Diego in 1981, I had an Asparagus Fern plant from the nursery where I put it into a decorative Mexican Pottery for my living room. The pot was outside previously and unknown to me had acquired a resident Black Widow spider. I thought it was a kool idea for a pet so I left it. My family wouldn't come over to visit when they knew what I had in my livingroom. Every night I'd come home from work and catch moths outside by the porch light and feed my pet. I finally let her go when she was big enough. *smile*

      Delete
  3. Hello,
    I enjoy reading a lot and your stories are worth reading, nice blog, keep it up.

    Locklizard

    ReplyDelete
  4. Thanks for taking your time and effort to make the blog. Great job!!! It sure helped me out. I am sure that it will answer questions for many...

    ReplyDelete