Myrmica lobicornis

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Myrmica lobicornis
Myrmica lobicornis casent0172718 profile 1.jpg
worker
Scientific classification Red Pencil Icon.png
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hymenoptera
Family: Formicidae
Subfamily: Myrmicinae
Genus: Myrmica
Species:
M. lobicornis
Binomial name
Myrmica lobicornis
(Nylander, 1846)

Myrmica lobicornis is an ant species distributed through the planes of North Europe and the mountains of Central and Southern Europe. It is also found in the forest zone of East Europe, the Caucasus, West Siberia, North-East Kazakhstan, East Siberia, and Mongolia stretching until Transbaikalia in the East. It inhabits coniferous or mixed woodlands, occasionally also meadows. It mostly nests in the ground, forms monogynous colonies containing a few hundred workers. [1] [2]

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<i>Myrmica rubra</i> Species of ant

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<i>Myrmica</i>

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<i>Myrmica colax</i> Species of ant

Myrmica colax is a species of ant, originally described by Cole as Paramyrmica colax. Until now, it is only known from its type locality in the Davis Mountains, Texas, USA. He found M. colax in a M. striolagaster colony and considers the two species quite similar in morphology. This suggests M. colax might be an inquiline.

<i>Myrmica ruginodis</i> Species of ant

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<i>Myrmica scabrinodis</i> Species of ant

Myrmica scabrinodis is a Euro-Siberian species of ant. It lives in moderately humid habitats, tolerates soil moisture but also needs direct sunshine. It often inhabits peat bogs. It builds nests in the ground, in grass or moss tussocks, even under stones or in rotten wood. Its colonies are monogynous or have only a few queens and may contain about 2500 workers. This ant species is the main host of the entomopathogenic fungus Rickia wasmannii. Phengaris caterpillars are primary threats of M. scabrinodis with specific species such as Phengaris arion developing a predatory relationship.

<i>Myrmica lonae</i> Species of ant

Myrmica lonae is a species of ant distributed across South, Central and North Europe, East Europe, Asia Minor, the Caucasus, West Siberian Plain and Northern Kazakhstan. It inhabits humid meadows both in the plains and in the mountains. It nests in the ground, under stones or in moss. It forms polygynous colonies with up to 1000 workers or more.

<i>Myrmica vandeli</i> Species of ant

Myrmica vandeli is an ant species found sporadically across several European countries. It often coexists with M. scabrinodis. It lives in open, wet meadows. Nests are typically constructed in moss pads. Polygynous colonies may contain 1500 workers. Larvae of Phengaris butterflies may parasitize their colonies.

<i>Myrmica schencki</i> Species of ant

Myrmica schencki is a species of ant in the genus Myrmica.

<i>Myrmica gallienii</i> Species of ant

Myrmica gallienii is an ant species distributed from Central Europe to West Siberia. Also found in Sweden, Finland, Hungary, Bulgaria and Romania. It lives in wet grasslands and swamps, often in saline land. It builds shallow nests with a soil mound in moist habitats but deep nests in sandy areas. Colonies are relatively large with thousands of individuals.

<i>Myrmica karavajevi</i> Species of ant

Myrmica karavajevi is a workerless, socially parasitic ant species: it is widely distributed across Europe. It lives in nests of other species that inhabit warm and humid habitats.

<i>Formica cinerea</i> Species of ant

Formica cinerea is a species of ant in the family Formicidae.

<i>Rickia wasmannii</i>

Rickia wasmannii is a species of the widely distributed entomoparasitic order of fungi Laboulbeniales. It is an obligatory ectoparasite of ants of the genus Myrmica. The thalli penetrate outer layer of the cuticle, and appear on the host body surface. Little is known about its effect on the host ant, but it is usually regarded as a rather neutral symbiont. Contrarily, however, a recent study has documented an increased need of drinking water and a shortened life-span of infected ants.

<i>Burmomyrma</i> Genus of ants

Burmomyrma is an extinct genus of ant-mimic wasp in the extinct family Falsiformicidae. The genus contains a single described species, Burmomyrma rossi. Burmomyrma is known from a single Middle Cretaceous fossil which was found in Asia.

<i>Myrmica elmesi</i> Species of ant

Myrmica elmesi is a species of ant in the subfamily Myrmicinae. The species, known from north-west Himalaya, belongs to pachei group, and is significantly different from all other described species of this group.

<i>Myrmica salina</i> Species of ant

Myrmica salina is a species of ant belonging to the genus Myrmica. They have a wide distribution in Europe and Siberia, as well as being abundant to several former republics of the Soviet Union, where their preferred habitats are relatively wet halophyte biotopes. Ruzsky first described the first specimen of the species in 1905.

Dolichoderus lobicornis is a species of ant in the genus Dolichoderus. Described by Kempf in 1959, the species is endemic to Brazil and Ecuador.

<i>Myrmica spatulata</i> Species of ant

Myrmica spatulata is a species of ant in the family Formicidae. It is found in the forests of the middle and eastern part of the United States.

<i>Myrmica punctiventris</i> Species of ant

Myrmica punctiventris is a species of ant in the family Formicidae.

References

  1. Csősz S, Markó B, Gallé L (2011). "The myrmecofauna (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) of Hungary: an updated checklist" (PDF). North-Western Journal of Zoology. 7: 55–62.
  2. Czekes Z, et al. (2012). "The genus Myrmica Latreille, 1804 (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) in Romania: distribution of species and key for their identification" (PDF). Entomologica romanica. 17: 29–50.