Albuquerque July 2016 Part 7
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Albuquerque Road Trip July 2016 Part 7
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Ant Species (1)

Harvester Ant (cf. Pogonomyrmex rugosus)

These large stinging ants were found throughout the road trip, from California to Albuquerque, a total distance of about 900 miles.

Workers Of
Pogonomyrmex
May Be Hybrids

Hybrids Exist Between sympatric species P. rugosus & P. barbatus:

Where their ranges overlap, these large desert harvester ants hybridize with each other in a complex pattern of sex determination.

Harvester Ant Workers: Hybrids Between Pogonomyrmex rugosus & P. barbatus

All Possible
Crosses *
P. barbatus
Queen
P. barbatus
Male
P. rugosus
Queen
P. rugosus
Male
P. barbatus
Queen
-----
Purebred
Queen
-----
Hybrid
Worker
P. barbatus
Male
Purebred
Queen
-----
Hybrid
Worker
-----
P. rugosus
Queen
-----
Hybrid
Worker
-----
Purebred
Queen
P. rugosus
Male
Hybrid
Worker
-----
Purebred
Queen
-----
* Note: Purebred Male Comes From Unfertilized Egg Of Purebred Queen.

Sex determination in the more than 12,000 species of ants is typical of the enormous insect order Hymenoptera, including bees and wasps. The method is called "haplodiploidy." Males develop from unfertilized eggs and are haploid with one set of maternal chromosomes. They are not identical clones of their queen mother because of crossing over and random assortment of chromosomes during meiosis (oogenesis). Deleterious (unfavorable) recessive genes are quickly weeded out in haploid males because they are expressed and cannot be masked by dominant genes. Females develop from fertilized eggs and are diploid with two sets of chromosomes. Some references say that larvae destined to become sexually mature queens are "well-nurtured," presumably similar to royal jelly in honey bees; however, other reputable authorities state that selection of a queen in some ant species is a lot more complicated and may involve special eggs destined to become queens (see next paragraph). Queen ants have one of the longest life-spans of any known insects--up to 28 years in captivity!

In zones of hybridization, Pogonomyrmex harvester ant workers of the southwestern U.S. are hybrids between P. rugosus and P. barbatus. They possess the best genetic traits of two species. The queen of each species mates with the males of opposite species. Sexually mature ants (queens and winged males) are purebreds: They are offspring of queen and males of the same species. Young queens need to mate with their own species to produce more purebred queens. They need to mate with the other species to produce "superorganism" workers. This strategy appears to be evolutionarily advantageous to both species.

  1. Cahan, S.H., and L. Keller. 2003. "Complex Hybrid Origin of Genetic Caste Determination in Harvester  
      Ants." Nature 424 (6946): 306-309.

  2. Schwander, T., Cahan, S.H., and L. Keller. 2007. "Characterization and Distribution of Pogonomymex  
      Harvester Ant Lineages with Genetic Caste Determination." Molecular Ecology 16 (2): 367-387.

  3. Schwander, T., and L. Keller. 2007. "Genetic Compatibility Affects Queens and Worker Caste  
      Determination." Science 322 (5901): 552.

Comparison Of Pogonomyrmex Hybrid Workers With A Mule

If the workers of an ant nest can be thought of as the superorganism's body, and the sexuals (queens & males) can be thought of as the superorganism's genetic material, it is as though an animal with the body of a mule has the genetic make-up of a horse and donkey!

Although Pogonomyrmex hybrid workers form a colony and the mule is a single organism, they make an interesting comparison. They both involve a cross between two species that forms a stronger hybrid offspring with the best traits of its parents. The ant colony of hybrid workers functions as a unit that could be described as a "superorganism." This is similar to the "Borg Collective" in Star Strek: The Next Generation.

The female horse (mare) mates with a male horse (stallion) to produce more male and female horses. If she mates with a male donkey (jackass) she can produce a male or female mule. If the mother is a donkey or jennyass and the father is a stallion, the resulting sterile hybrid is called a hinny. The mule is a sterile hybrid with the body size of a horse and the sure-footedness and endurance of a donkey. That is why the mule is essentially a "superorganism" used as a powerful pack animal. In the case of Pogonomyrmex, the hybrid "super-ants" are the workers!

An original 20 mule team wagon train used in 1885 to haul borax from Death Valley to Mojave, a distance of 165 miles. The borax weighed 24 tons and the entire wagon train weighed 36.5 tons (gross weight). The last wagon carried water for the mules during the hot, 10 day journey across the Mojave Desert. Today, a load of this size would be pulled by a 600 horse power Kenworth T-2000 tractor with an air conditioned cab!
  More Information About The Mule On Wayne's Word  

Pogonomyrmex Swarming After Monsoonal Rain Storm

After monsoonal rains in Holbrook, Arizona (16 July 2016) the Pogonomyrmex colonies began to swarm. This is when the winged adults leave the nest, mate, and start new colonies.

  See Monsoonal Clouds & More Swarming Queen Ants  


Acrobat Ant (Crematogaster)

Why Is It Called Acrobat Ant?

The name "acrobat ant" refers to the unusual way a worker holds its abdomen (gaster) up over the rest of its body by a very flexible petiole.