Where’s the Meat? Rover Ants and Carrion Flowers

Note:  This post is not for the squeamish.

It all started when I noticed rover ants in a flower. It wasn’t just any old flower, though.

Ever seen one of these?

Commonly called carrion flowers or African starfish flowers, plants in the Genus Stapelia are low-growing (only 8 to 12 inches high), succulent perennials. They mainly grow in southern Africa, but can are treated as an interesting potted plant elsewhere. You can see the plant in the background of the photograph below.

The Stapelia flower looks weird, doesn’t? The surface is brick red, wrinkly and covered with soft hairs. It looks quite a bit like bloody mammal hide.

If you were standing with the photographer, you just might be holding your nose, too.  The common name carrion flower comes from the foul odor the flowers produce.

The odor is a powerful attractant to blow flies and other types of carrion flies.

Why does the plant do this?

The answer is stuck to this poor fly’s mouthparts. See the orange bundles? Those are the pollinia (it has two bundles). Pollinia are pouches that release pollen. The fly picks them up at one Stapelia flower and loses them at the next, pollinating the plant.

The flies are so taken in by the deception that, depending on the species, they lay eggs or larviposit (lay larvae) on the flower.

That is where the rover ants come in.

The rover ants have found a ready supply of protein in the form of fly larvae and eggs.

Ironically, the rovers have found real “meat” in a plant that is using a meaty appearance as a deception.

Other types of ants visit Stapelia flowers. In this video, you can see ants in some of the scenes.

For more in depth information about Stapelia and more photographs of ants in Stapelia flowers, see S.P. Bester’s article from the South African National Herbarium

Ants of Tucson, Arizona: Wrap-up

Júlio came up with the correct answer to the questions in the last post.

Species 5 is Acromyrmex versicolor, and this worker was carrying a very large piece of caterpillar frass. As I noted in the comment, the frass is most likely from a Manduca rustica caterpillar, as there was a host tree nearby.

(I apologize for the quality of the photograph. I was lying flat on my stomach on the sidewalk in a very public place while this ant was moving rapidly along.)

Júlio also wondered about an Acromyrmex versicolor worker carrying frass, which is something other leafcutters like Mycocepurus or Cyphomyrmex or even Trachymyrmex are more like to do.

I did locate the nest entrance. The workers were variable in size, showing different castes.

They appeared to have three pairs of spines on the mesosoma.

The workers were definitely collecting plant material. So, I think it is safe to say these ants were Acromyrmex versicolor.

And there’s a Dorymyrmex making an appearance.

As for the ant-finding challenge, I thought I did pretty well to find honeypot ants and leafcutters within two hours, but then again it is pretty easy to find cool ants in Tucson.

Summary:

I found a total of eight different ant species, less than the expert at the Tucson airport, but still a lot of fun.

Crematogaster opuntiae

Forelius, probably mccooki

Brachymyrmex patagonicus

Myrmecocystus placodops

Acrimyrmex versicolor

Solenopsis xyloni

Dorymyrmex sp.

plus one species I, gulp, could not identify and the photographs are not a help.

I know I could have found more if I could have flipped rocks or tore into trees, but this was a public place with prohibitions on that sort of thing. Surprisingly, there were no harvester ants in the list. I’m not sure why not, because I find them quite often in other places.

So, what do you think about Acromyrmex carrying caterpillar frass? Is that common behavior or not?

Ants of Tucson, Arizona: Mystery

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

Species 5:  You tell me.

To make this a little more fun, why don’t you tell me what the fifth species is.

Bonus:  What is this ant carrying?

Ants of Tucson, Arizona: Forelius

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

Species 2. Forelius

Most likely they are Forelius mcccooki, the species I have identified in Phoenix, but because this was a public place I didn’t take samples.

Chris Schmidt indicates that Forelius are probably the ants you are most likely to stumble upon in Tucson (Backyard Ants of Tucson).

Forelius are always easy to spot because they are active even during the hottest parts of the day and they forage in long trails along sidewalks or up trees.

I had to laugh at what I found next.

Do you remember the person who fed colored water to ants to make them turn the colors of the rainbow? (Alex Wild shows a photograph by Maxim Piessen that uses the same technique.)

Now nature imitates art.

The color was provided by…

a prickly pear cactus fruit with help from this gal.

Do Forelius ants occur where you live? What color are they? 🙂