To install click the Add extension button. That's it.

The source code for the WIKI 2 extension is being checked by specialists of the Mozilla Foundation, Google, and Apple. You could also do it yourself at any point in time.

4,5
Kelly Slayton
Congratulations on this excellent venture… what a great idea!
Alexander Grigorievskiy
I use WIKI 2 every day and almost forgot how the original Wikipedia looks like.
Live Statistics
English Articles
Improved in 24 Hours
Added in 24 Hours
What we do. Every page goes through several hundred of perfecting techniques; in live mode. Quite the same Wikipedia. Just better.
.
Leo
Newton
Brights
Milds

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Aphaenogaster
Temporal range: Lutetian - recent
A. swammerdami worker
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hymenoptera
Family: Formicidae
Subfamily: Myrmicinae
Tribe: Stenammini
Genus: Aphaenogaster
Mayr, 1853
Type species
Aphaenogaster sardoa
Mayr, 1853
Diversity[1]
200 species
Synonyms
  • Deromyrma Forel, 1913
  • Nystalomyrma Wheeler, 1916

Aphaenogaster is a genus of myrmicine ants. About 200 species have been described, including 18 fossil species.[1] They occur worldwide except in South America south of Colombia, sub-Saharan Africa, and Antarctica.[2]

They are often confused with Pheidole or Pheidologeton. These two have major and minor workers, while Aphaenogaster has only a single worker caste. Pheidole has three-segmented clubs on its antennae, while Aphaenogaster has four segments and a larger body size. Pheidologeton has 11-segmented antennae, while the antennae in Aphaenogaster are 12-segmented.[3]

In Australia, they often build dense, conspicuous nests.[4] Nest entrances are generally funnel-shaped with diameters up to 4 cm, which resulted in the common name funnel ants. These nests can be a serious problem for golfers or on pastures and unsealed airstrips, because the fragile surface easily collapses under pressure.[3] Where it occurs, Aphaenogaster bioturbation is an important soil and landscape process.[4]

Aphaenogaster ants probably get most of their food from tended aphids on the roots of plants, which explains that they are rarely seen on the surface. The funnel-shaped openings could play a role in trapping arthropods, which are also eaten.[3]

YouTube Encyclopedic

  • 1/1
    Views:
    636
  • Rapid Worker Recruitment in the Ant Aphaenogaster lamellidens

Transcription

Species

Aphaenogaster dlusskyana worker in amber
Aphaenogaster gonacantha worker
A. lepida worker and male
  • A. aktaci Kiran & Tezcan, 2008
  • A. amphioceanica De Andrade, 1995[5]
  • A. angulata Viehmeyer, 1922
  • A. annandalei Mukerjee, 1930
  • A. antiqua Dlussky & Perkovsky, 2002
  • A. araneoides Emery, 1890
  • A. archaica (Meunier, 1915)
  • A. ashmeadi (Emery, 1895)
  • A. atlantis Santschi, 1929
  • A. avita Fujiyama, 1970[6]
  • A. balcanica (Emery, 1898)
  • A. balcanicoides Boer, 2013
  • A. baogong Terayama, 2009
  • A. barbara Shattuck, 2008
  • A. barbigula Wheeler, 1916
  • A. baronii Cagniant, 1988
  • A. beccarii Emery, 1887
  • A. beesoni Donisthorpe, 1933
  • A. boulderensis Smith, 1941
  • A. burri (Donisthorpe, 1950)
  • A. caeciliae Viehmeyer, 1922
  • A. campana Emery, 1878
  • A. cardenai Espadaler, 1981
  • A. carolinensis Wheeler, 1915
  • A. cavernicola Donisthorpe, 1938
  • A. cecconii Emery, 1894
  • A. concolor Watanabe & Yamane, 1999
  • A. cristata (Forel, 1902)
  • A. crocea André, 1881
  • A. curiosa Santschi, 1933
  • A. dejeani Cagniant, 1982
  • A. depilis Santschi, 1911
  • A. depressa Bolton, 1995
  • A. dlusskyana Radchenko & Perkovsky, 2016[2]
  • A. dlusskyi Radchenko & Arakelian, 1991
  • A. donann Watanabe & Yamane, 1999
  • A. donisthorpei Carpenter, 1930[7]
  • A. dromedaria (Emery, 1900)
  • A. dulciniae Emery, 1924
  • A. dumetora (Lin, 1982)
  • A. edentula Watanabe & Yamane, 1999
  • A. epirotes (Emery, 1895)
  • A. erabu Nishizono & Yamane, 1990
  • A. espadaleri Cagniant, 1984
  • A. exasperata Wheeler, 1921
  • A. fabulosa Arnol'di, 1968
  • A. fallax Cagniant, 1992
  • A. famelica (Smith, 1874)
  • A. faureli Cagniant, 1969
  • A. feae Emery, 1889
  • A. fengbo Terayama, 2009
  • A. festae Emery, 1915
  • A. finzii Müller, 1921
  • A. flemingi Smith, 1928
  • A. floridana Smith, 1941
  • A. foreli Cagniant, 1996
  • A. friederichsi Forel, 1918
  • A. fulva Roger, 1863
  • A. geei Wheeler, 1921
  • A. gemella (Roger, 1862)
  • A. georgica Arnol'di, 1968
  • A. gibbosa (Latreille, 1798)
  • A. gonacantha (Emery, 1899)
  • A. gracillima Watanabe & Yamane, 1999
  • A. graeca Schulz, 1994
  • A. haarlovi Collingwood, 1961
  • A. hesperia Santschi, 1911
  • A. holtzi (Emery, 1898)
  • A. honduriana Mann, 1922
  • A. huachucana Creighton, 1934
  • A. hunanensis Wu & Wang, 1992
  • A. iberica Emery, 1908
  • A. incurviclypea Wang & Zheng, 1997
  • A. inermita Bolton, 1995
  • A. iranica Kiran & Alipanah, 2013
  • A. irrigua Watanabe & Yamane, 1999
  • A. isekram Bernard, 1977
  • A. italica Bondroit, 1918
  • A. januschevi Arnol'di, 1976
  • A. japonica Forel, 1911
  • A. karpathica Boer, 2013
  • A. kervillei Forel, 1910
  • A. kimberleyensis Shattuck, 2008
  • A. koniari Cagniant & Galkowski, 2013
  • A. kumejimana Watanabe & Yamane, 1999
  • A. kurdica Ruzsky, 1905
  • A. laevior Emery, 1887
  • A. lamellidens Mayr, 1886
  • A. lapidescens Zhang, 1989
  • A. ledouxi Tohmé, 1969
  • A. lepida Wheeler, 1930
  • A. lesbica Forel, 1913
  • A. leveillei Emery, 1881
  • A.? longaeva (Scudder, 1877)[8][7]
  • A. longiceps (Smith, 1858)
  • A. loriai (Emery, 1897)
  • A. lustrans Smith, 1961
  • A. luteipes Watanabe & Yamane, 1999
  • A. maculata Théobald, 1937
  • A. maculifrons Kiran & Tezcan, 2008
  • A. maculipes Théobald, 1937
  • A. mariae Forel, 1886
  • A. mauritanica Dalla Torre, 1893
  • A. mayri Carpenter, 1930[7]
  • A. mediterrae Shattuck, 2008
  • A. megommata Smith, 1963
  • A. melitensis Santschi, 1933
  • A. mersa Wheeler, 1915
  • A. messoroides Dlussky, Soyunov & Zabelin, 1990
  • A. mexicana (Pergande, 1896)
  • A. miamiana Wheeler, 1932
  • A. miniata Cagniant, 1990
  • A. minutula Watanabe & Yamane, 1999
  • A. muelleriana Wolf, 1915
  • A. mutica Pergande, 1896
  • A. nadigi Santschi, 1923
  • A. obsidiana (Mayr, 1861)
  • A. occidentalis (Emery, 1895)
  • A. oligocenica Wheeler, 1915
  • A. opposita (Say, 1836)
  • A. osimensis Teranishi, 1940
  • A. ovaticeps (Emery, 1898)
  • A. pallescens Walker, 1871
  • A. pallida (Nylander, 1849)
  • A. paludosa Zhang, 1989
  • A. pannonica Bachmayer, 1960
  • A. patruelis Forel, 1886
  • A. perplexa Smith, 1961
  • A. phalangium Emery, 1890
  • A. phillipsi Wheeler & Mann, 1916
  • A. picea (Wheeler, 1908)
  • A. picena Baroni Urbani, 1971
  • A. polyodonta Zhou, 2001
  • A. poultoni Crawley, 1922
  • A. praedo Emery, 1908
  • A. praenoda Santschi, 1933
  • A. praerelicta De Andrade, 1995[5]
  • A. projectens Donisthorpe, 1947
  • A. pumilopuncta Zhou, 2001
  • A. punctaticeps MacKay, 1989
  • A. pythia Forel, 1915
  • A. quadrispina Emery, 1911
  • A. radchenkoi Kiran & Tezcan, 2008
  • A. reichelae Shattuck, 2008
  • A. relicta Wheeler & Mann, 1914
  • A. rhaphidiiceps (Mayr, 1877)
  • A. rifensis Cagniant, 1994
  • A. rothneyi (Forel, 1902)
  • A. rudis Enzmann, 1947
  • A. rugosoferruginea Forel, 1889
  • A. rugulosa Watanabe & Yamane, 1999
  • A. rupestris Forel, 1909
  • A. sagei (Forel, 1902)
  • A. saharensis Bernard, 1953
  • A. sangiorgii (Emery, 1901)
  • A. sardoa Mayr, 1853
  • A. schmidti Karavaiev, 1912
  • A. schurri (Forel, 1902)
  • A. semipolita (Nylander, 1856)
  • A. senilis Mayr, 1853
  • A. shanwangensis (Hong, 1984)
  • A. sicardi Cagniant, 1990
  • A. sicula Emery, 1908
  • A. simonellii Emery, 1894
  • A. smythiesii (Forel, 1902)
  • A. sommerfeldti Mayr, 1868
  • A. spinosa Emery, 1878
  • A. splendida (Roger, 1859)
  • A. sporadis Santschi, 1933
  • A. striativentris Forel, 1895
  • A. strioloides Forel, 1890
  • A. subcostata Viehmeyer, 1922
  • A. subexaperata Zhou, 2001
  • A. subterranea (Latreille, 1798)
  • A. subterraneoides Emery, 1881
  • A. swammerdami Forel, 1886
  • A. syriaca Emery, 1908
  • A. takahashii Wheeler, 1930
  • A. tennesseensis (Mayr, 1862)
  • A. testaceopilosa (Lucas, 1849)
  • A. texana Wheeler, 1915
  • A. theryi Santschi, 1923
  • A. tibetana Donisthorpe, 1929
  • A. tinauti Cagniant, 1992
  • A. tipuna Forel, 1913
  • A. tokarainsulana Watanabe & Yamane, 1999
  • A. torossiani Cagniant, 1988
  • A. treatae Forel, 1886
  • A. turkestanica Arnol'di, 1976
  • A. uinta Wheeler, 1917
  • A. ujhelyii Szabó, 1910
  • A. umphreyi Deyrup & Davis, 1998
  • A. wangtian Terayama, 2009
  • A. wangye Terayama, 2009
  • A. weigoldi Viehmeyer, 1922
  • A. weulersseae Cagniant, 1989
  • A. wilsoni Cagniant, 1988
  • A. xuatian Terayama, 2009

References

  1. ^ a b Bolton, B. (2014). "Aphaenogaster". AntCat. Retrieved 23 July 2014.
  2. ^ a b Radchenko, A. G.; Perkovsky, E. E. (2016). "The ant Aphaenogaster dlusskyana sp. nov. (Hymenoptera, Formicidae) from the Sakhalin amber—the earliest described species of an extant genus of Myrmicinae". Paleontological Journal. 50 (9): 936–946. Bibcode:2016PalJ...50..936R. doi:10.1134/S0031030116090136. S2CID 90471180.
  3. ^ a b c Genus Aphaenogaster Archived October 9, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ a b Richards, P.J. (2009) Aphaenogaster ants as bioturbators: impacts on soil and slope processes. Earth-Science Reviews 96: 92-106.
  5. ^ a b De Andrade, M. L. (1995). "The ant genus Aphaenogaster in Dominican and Mexican amber (Amber Collection Stuttgart: Hymenoptera, Formicidae. IX: Pheidolini)". Stuttgarter Beiträge zur Naturkunde. Serie B (Geologie und Paläontologie). 223: 1–11.
  6. ^ Fujiyama, I. (1970). "Fossil insects from the Chojabaru Formation, Iki Island, Japan". Memoirs of the Natural Science Museum, Tokyo. 3: 65–74.
  7. ^ a b c Carpenter, F. M. (1930). "The fossil ants of North America" (PDF). Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology. 70: 1–66.
  8. ^ Scudder, S. H. (1890). "The Tertiary insects of North America". United States Geological Survey of the Territories, Washington: 615. ISBN 9780665263149.

External links

This page was last edited on 24 February 2024, at 06:40
Basis of this page is in Wikipedia. Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 Unported License. Non-text media are available under their specified licenses. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. WIKI 2 is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wikimedia Foundation.