Leptothorax kutteri | |
---|---|
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Class: | Insecta |
Order: | Hymenoptera |
Family: | Formicidae |
Subfamily: | Myrmicinae |
Genus: | Leptothorax |
Species: | L. kutteri |
Binomial name | |
Leptothorax kutteri Buschinger, 1966 | |
Leptothorax kutteri is a species of ant in the genus Leptothorax . It is endemic to Europe, Germany, Sweden, and Switzerland. [1]
Leptothorax pocahontas is a threatened species of ant endemic to Alberta, Canada, facing a high risk of extinction.
A species that is extinct in the wild (EW) is one that has been categorized by the International Union for Conservation of Nature as known only by living members kept in captivity or as a naturalized population outside its historic range due to massive habitat loss.
Temnothorax kutteri is a species of ant in the genus Temnothorax. It is native to southern France and eastern Iberia, from the Pyrenees to the Sierra Nevada. The species parasitises other ant species in the genus Temnothorax.
Leptothorax goesswaldi is a species of ant in the genus Leptothorax. It is found in France and Switzerland.
Leptothorax pacis is a species of ant in the genus Leptothorax. It is endemic to Switzerland.
Leptothorax buschingeri is a species of ant in the genus Leptothorax. It is endemic to Switzerland.
Leptothorax is a genus of small ants with mainly Holarctic distributions. The genus is notable for its widespread social parasitism, i.e. they are dependent on the help of workers from other ant species during a part or the whole of their life cycles.
Leptothorax duloticus is a species of especially hostile slave-maker ant in the subfamily Myrmicinae. It is endemic to the United States.
Leptothorax faberi is a species of ant in the genus Leptothorax. It is endemic to Canada.
Leptothorax minutissimus is a species of ant in the genus Leptothorax. It is native to the United States.
Leptothorax recedens is a species of ant in the family Formicidae. It is found in France, Italy, and Spain, with the most recent finding in Slovenia.
Tetramorium kutteri is a species of ant in the genus Tetramorium. It is endemic to Spain.
Leptothorax acervorum is a small brown to yellow ant in the subfamily Myrmicinae. It was first described by Johan Christian Fabricius in 1793. L. acervorum is vastly distributed across the globe, most commonly found in the coniferous forests of Central, Western and Northern Europe. The morphology of L. acervorum is extremely similar to that of other Leptothorax ants. The difference arises in the two-toned appearance of L. acervorum, with the head and metasoma being darker than the mesosoma segment of the body, and hair across its body. Following Bergmann's rule—unusually, for ectothermic animals—body size increases with latitude.
Leptothorax muscorum is a species of ant of the genus Leptothorax that ranges through a variety of habitats throughout much of Europe, northern Asia, and North and Central America, with a particularly wide distribution in the palearctic. Capable of surviving in extreme Arctic-Alpine conditions, the species is perhaps the northernmost dwelling ant indigenous to the Western Hemisphere.
Leptothorax crassipilis is a species of ant in the family Formicidae.
Leptothorax longispinosus is an American species of ant.