Heat-loving Australian ants believe in diversity, hint 74 species new to science

Heat-loving Australian ants believe in diversity, hint 74 species new to science
A medium-sized worker of the newly described species Melophorus marmar. This ant likes to nest on the dry beds of salt lakes. Credit: Dr. Brian Heterick

The 'furnace ants' or 'honeypot ants' present a very large genus of ants, Melophorus, confined to Australia. Long believed to be megadiverse, some scientists have even suggested that the group may contain 'well over 1000 species'. However, to this point, only 32 species and subspecies had been described.

Scientists Dr Brian Heterick of Curtin University, Dr Mark Castalanelli of Ecodiagnostics Pty Ltd and Dr Steve Shattuck of the Australian National University, funded by an internationally competitive Australian Biological Resources (ABRS) grant, set out to find the true facts.

As a result, they discovered as many as 74 new species belonging to Melophorus. In their study, published in the open access journal ZooKeys, they also provide a taxonomic key to the workers of a total of 93 species in the genus.

Among the studied ants, there are quite bizarre ones, including a species (Melophorus hirsutus) whose eyes are strangely protruding out of his head to a varying degree. In the extreme cases, the eyes are so pointy that could be likened to ice-cream cones. Named many years ago, this ant appears to be older than the rest of the examined living species. Furthermore, unlike most of them, it does not seem adapted to heat. It is confined to the wet eastern coast of Australia.

Dr Heterick spent two weeks collecting specimens in the often rugged and forbidding terrain of Western Australia, while the team also asked a number of major museum collections to loan them specimens.

Heat-loving Australian ants believe in diversity, hint 74 species new to science
The nests of M. marmar are raised to avoid inundation. The equipment is used for scale. Credit: Dr. Brian Heterick

The newly collected ants were placed in alcohol and subjected to genetic tests using one mitochondrial and four nuclear genes. The findings were then compared with those from physical examinations to prepare the taxonomic key - a set of distinctive features per species that can be used to differentiate within the group.

Given the generally complex nature of these ants, the authors expect for the genus to further expand in future. They speculate that even though the numbers may increase to around 100 species, not the 'well over 1000' previously predicted, they still illustrate an incredible diversity.

The authors estimate that Melophorus arose around 35 million years ago. The closest relatives of the genus are also confined to the Australasian region with the exception of a single genus living in South America.

Furthermore, the is also quite astonishing thanks to another trait shared among the species.

Heat-loving Australian ants believe in diversity, hint 74 species new to science
The previously known species Melophorus hirsutus showing its peculiar protruding eyes. With the eye shape varying within the species, there are even more startling individuals whose eyes are so pointy that they resemble ice-cream cones. Credit: Dr. Brian Heterick

"By the way, this group of has a thing or two to tell those of us who get lost easily!" comments lead author Dr Brian Heterick.

"They can find their way home in a featureless landscape by means of an internal compass influenced by information gathered on earlier journeys. We are not the first to use a computing system!"

More information: Brian E. Heterick et al, Revision of the ant genus Melophorus (Hymenoptera, Formicidae), ZooKeys (2017). DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.700.11784

Journal information: ZooKeys

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Citation: Heat-loving Australian ants believe in diversity, hint 74 species new to science (2017, September 21) retrieved 17 July 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2017-09-heat-loving-australian-ants-diversity-hint.html
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