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Dorylus

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Dorylus
Dorylus gribodoi
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hymenoptera
Family: Formicidae
Leach, 1815
Subfamily: Dorylinae
Leach, 1815
Genus: Dorylus
Fabricius, 1793
Type species
Vespa helvola
Diversity[1]
61 species
Synonyms

Cosmaecetes Spinola, 1851
Shuckardia Emery, 1895
Sphecomyrmex Schulz, 1906
Sphegomyrmex Imhoff, 1852

Dorylus, also known as driver ants, safari ants, or siafu, is a large genus of army ants found primarily in central and east Africa, although the range also extends to southern Africa and tropical Asia. The term siafu is a loanword from Swahili,[2] and is one of numerous similar words from regional Bantu languages used by indigenous peoples to describe various species of these ants. Unlike the New World members of the former subfamily Ecitoninae (now Dorylinae), members of this genus form temporary subterranean bivouacs in underground cavities which they excavate and inhabit - either for a few days or up to three months. Also, unlike some New World army ants, driver ants are not specialized predators of other species of ant, instead being more generalistic with a diet consisting of a diversity of arthropods. Their colonies are enormous compared to other ant species, and can contain over 20 million individuals.[3] As with their American counterparts, workers exhibit caste polymorphism with the soldiers having particularly large heads that power their scissor-like mandibles. They are capable of stinging, but very rarely do so, relying instead on their powerful shearing jaws. A large part of their diet consists of earthworms. [4] Driver ant queens are the largest living ants known, with the largest measuring between 40 - 63 millimeters (1.5 - 2.4 inches) in total body length depending on their physiological condition.[5]

Life cycle

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Some soldier safari ants make tunnels to provide a safe route for the workers.

Seasonally, when food supplies become short, they leave the hill and form marching columns of up to 20,000,000 ants, which constitute a considerable threat to humans, though they can be easily avoided as a column can only travel about 20 meters in an hour. It is for those unable to move, or when the columns pass through homes, that there is the greatest risk.[6] The presence of a mobile column of safari ants is, conversely, beneficial to certain human communities, such as the Maasai. They perform a pest prevention service in farming communities, consuming the majority of other crop-pests, from insects to large rats.[7] For example, driver ants prey on larvae of the African sugarcane borer, a pest moth in sub-Saharan Africa.

The characteristic long columns of ants will fiercely defend themselves against anything that attacks them.[4] Columns are arranged with the smaller ants being flanked by the larger soldier ants. These instinctively take up positions as sentries, and set a perimeter corridor through which the smaller ants can run safely. Their bite is severely painful, each soldier leaving two puncture wounds when removed. Removal is difficult, however, as their jaws are extremely strong, and one can pull a soldier ant in two without it releasing its hold. Large numbers of ants can kill small or immobilized animals and strip them to husks. Such is the strength of the ant's jaws that, in East Africa, they are used as natural emergency sutures. Various East African indigenous tribal peoples (e.g. the Maasai moran), when suffering from a laceration in the wilds, will use the soldiers to stitch the wound by getting the ants to bite on both sides of the gash, then breaking off the body. This use of ants as makeshift surgical staples creates a seal that can hold for days at a time, and the procedure can be repeated, if necessary, allowing natural healing to commence.[8] All Dorylus species are blind, and, like most varieties of ants, communicate primarily through pheromones.[4]

In the mating season, alates (winged drones, queens of driver-ant species do not grow wings) are formed. The drones are larger than the soldiers and the queens are even larger. Driver ants do not perform a nuptial flight, but mate on the ground and the queens go off to establish new colonies. As with most ants, workers and soldiers are sterile females, and so do not reproduce.[4]

A male driver ant

Male driver ants, sometimes known as "sausage flies" (a term also applied to males of New World dorylines) due to their bloated, sausage-like abdomens, are among the largest ant morphs and were originally believed to be members of a different species. Males leave the colony soon after hatching but are drawn to the scent trail left by a column of siafu once they reach sexual maturity. When a colony of driver ants encounters a male, they tear his wings off and carry him back to the nest to be mated with a recently hatched queen. As in the majority of ant species, males die shortly afterward.[4] Driver ant queens exhibit polyandry; young queens from some species with large colony sizes must mate with 10–20 males before they have gathered enough sperm for their reproductive lives.[9] Once the queen is ready, roughly half of the workers in the colony will leave with her to found a new colony.[10] Driver ant queens are the largest ants on Earth and have the greatest egg-laying capacity among insects, laying several million eggs each month.[11]

Several species in this genus carry out raids on termitaria, paralyzing or killing termites and carting them back to the nest.[12]

Colonies of driver-ant species have only one queen.[13] When she dies, the surviving workers may try to join another colony, but in other cases, when two colonies of the same driver-ant species meet, they usually change the marching directions to avoid conflicts.[citation needed]

Species

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Dorylus sp. in Cameroon, consuming a grasshopper
Dorylus sp. in Zambia, consuming mayonnaise
A column of safari ants in Kakamega Forest, Kenya, guarded by soldiers

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Bolton, B. (2014). "Dorylus". AntCat. Retrieved 17 July 2014.
  2. ^ Swahili translation Archived July 20, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Silcock, Lisa, ed. (1992). The Rainforests - A Celebration. San Francisco: Chronicle Books. pp. 50 (caption) and 51 (photo). ISBN 0-8118-0155-1.
  4. ^ a b c d e Hölldobler, Bert; Wilson, Edward O. (1990). The Ants. Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-04075-9.
  5. ^ Kronauer, Daniel (2020). Army Ants Nature's Ultimate Social Hunters. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. p. 237. ISBN 978-0-674-24155-8.
  6. ^ "NOVA - Master of the Killer Ants - PBS". www.pbs.org.
  7. ^ Hastings, H.** Conling, D.E., Graham, D.Y.* & (1988-03-01). "Notes on the natural host surveys and laboratory rearing of Goniozus natalensis Gordh (Hymenoptera: Bethylidae), a parasitoid of Eldana saccharina Walker (Lepidoptera: Pyralidae) larvae from Cyperus papyrus L. in Southern Africa"[permanent dead link](PDF). Journal of the Entomological Society of Southern Africa
  8. ^ "From Ants to Staples: History and Ideas Concerning Suturing Techniques". ResearchGate.
  9. ^ Kronauer, Daniel J.C.; Johnson, Robert A.; Boomsma, Jacobus J. (February 23, 2007). "The Evolution of Multiple Mating in Army Ants". Evolution. 61 (2): 413–422. doi:10.1111/j.1558-5646.2007.00040.x. PMID 17348950. The evolution of mating systems in eusocial Hymenoptera is constrained because females mate only during a brief period early in life, whereas inseminated queens and their stored sperm may live for decades…We show that queens of Neivamyrmex and Aenictus mate with the same high numbers of males (usually ca. 10–20) as do queens of army ant species with very large colony sizes…The species of Dorylus (Anomma) and Eciton where multiple queen mating has been documented (Kronauer 2004, 2006a, 2006b; Denny et al. 2004) have extreme degrees of worker caste polymorphism and larger colonies than almost any other social insect…
  10. ^ Kronauer, Daniel J.C. (September 11, 2009). "Recent advances in army ant biology (Hymenoptera: Formicidae)". Myrmecological News. 12: 51–65. Retrieved 2023-07-05. The permanent lack of wings in army ant queens has one important corollary: they do not go on mating flights. Instead, young army ant queens mate inside their natal colony with foreign males that disperse on the wing…The reproductive colony undergoes fission during which the worker force splits into two roughly equal parts…
  11. ^ Kronauer, Daniel J.C.; Johnson, Robert A.; Boomsma, Jacobus J. (February 23, 2007). "The Evolution of Multiple Mating in Army Ants". Evolution. 61 (2): 413–422. doi:10.1111/j.1558-5646.2007.00040.x. PMID 17348950. Being the largest ants on Earth, African Dorylus (Anomma) queens also hold the world record in reproductive potential among the insects, with an egg-laying capacity of several millions per month…
  12. ^ Biotropics Archived January 24, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  13. ^ Boswell, Grame P.; Franks, Nigel R.; Britton, Nicholas (19 March 2001). "Arms races and the evolution of big fierce societies" (PDF). Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 268 (1477): 1723–1730. doi:10.1098/rspb.2001.1671. PMC 1088800. PMID 11506686. Retrieved 2023-07-05. Here we consider the largest single-queen insect societies, those of the Old World army ant Dorylus, single colonies of which can have 20 million workers.
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