Ants of Tucson, Arizona: Myrmecocystus placodops

The challenge: to see how many species of ants I could find in Tucson, Arizona in two hours.

Species 4. Myrmecocystus placodops

In addition to the usual suspects, Tuscon has quite a few interesting species.

What are those peeking out of a hole?

Taking a closer look, I found worker ants with black bodies, red heads and long antennae.

The workers were milling about at the nest entrance, aware of my presence.

These are Myrmecocystus placodops, a type of honeypot ant.

Honeypot ants are the camels of the ant family. They live in dry areas throughout the world where food and water may be scarce for long periods of time. To cope, honeypot ants have unique storage tanks for holding liquids. These storage tanks are special large individual worker ants called repletes.

When times are good and food is abundant, the repletes store any extra liquid food that is available and swell up like balloons. Then they hang around, literally, from the ceiling of the nest, until times are tough. If the colony runs out of food, the other workers entice the repletes to spit up their reserves to share with the others.

Honeypot ants have deep nests. Mammal predators, such as badgers, are known to dig the nests open in search of the repletes.

Watching these, I had to wonder about the red heads. Remember the stories about the parasitic nematode that causes an ant’s gaster to swell up like a red berry to make it enticing to birds (see National Geographic’s version)? Looking at those photographs reminded me of a reverse of these ants, which have bright heads instead.

Have you ever encountered Myrmecocystus placodops?
What do you think of those red heads?

4 Replies to “Ants of Tucson, Arizona: Myrmecocystus placodops”

  1. Not sure if I have found M. placodops, but I saw the rather similarly colored M. mendax in the Chiricahuas recently.

  2. The whole genus has long palps. These two are separated by the relative length of the pronotal and first tergal dorsal pilosity compared to the distance between the eye and mandibular base. Basically, a pain to determine!

  3. That is good to know.

    I started this blog to learn more about ants, and I really appreciate your feedback.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.