Harpegnathos venator is a species of ant found in South and Southeast Asia in northern India and parts of Burma. Like other ants in the genus Harpegnathos, it jumps to capture prey and lives in relatively small nesting colonies.[2]

Harpegnathos venator
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hymenoptera
Family: Formicidae
Genus: Harpegnathos
Species:
H. venator
Binomial name
Harpegnathos venator
(Smith, 1858)
Synonyms

Drepanognathus venator, Smith, 1858[1]

Subspecies

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  • H. v. chapmani Donisthorpe, 1937[3]
  • H. v. rugosus (Mayr, 1862)[3]

Description

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Queen
 
Male and queen

The following is a taxonomic description of the ant based on C. T. Bingham's The Fauna of British India, Including Ceylon and Burma (Hymenoptera, Volume 2):[4]

  • Worker: Black; mandibles, clypeus, antennal carinae, and legs brownish yellow, antennae chestnut, apex of the abdomen rusty; head and thorax closely coarsely cribrate punctate ; abdomen finely densely reticulate punctate, opaque, with some large shallow punctures. Head, thorax and abdomen covered with rather sparse, short, erect pale hairs ; pubescence minute but fairly plentiful, to be seen only in certain lights. For the rest the characters of the genus.
  • Queen: Similar to the worker, but the abdomen with long oblong punctures, the ocelli in the middle of the front. Thorax and abdomen more massive and as in Harpegnathos saltator.
  • Male: Mandibles broad at the base, attenuate, narrow and slender towards the apex, which is directed forwards. Head rectangular, somewhat rounded, broader than long. Eyes rather smaller than in the queen. A short depression between the mesonotum and scutellum, bordered by carinae and strongly striated inside. Smooth and shining, except for the thorax, which is coarsely rugose, punctate or striated (longitudinally on the metanotum). Covered by a fine yellowish pilosity, dense on the legs, less abundant elsewhere. Pubescence very sparse. The first abdominal segment is pyriform and has the appearance of forming a second node to the pedicel, a slight constriction between the second and third segments. Thorax and pedicel of a brownish black, head and basal segment of the abdomen reddish yellow. Best of the abdomen yellow with a tinge of red. Legs and antenna) very pale testaceous.
  • Multifunctional mandibles: The ant's mandible exhibits spatially-dependent morphology and bi-axial kinematics, which collectively allows it to perform various daily labors from hunting and attacking to carefully caring for ant eggs.[5] Regarding the spatially-dependent morphology, at the distal-to-middle part, the mandible has double-rowed, non-parallel teeth responsible for powerful clamping. At the proximal part, the mandible has a smooth concavity that is solely used for gently gripping ant eggs.[6] On the other hand, the mandible rotates about two orthogonal axes, changing the mandibular distance and configuration simultaneously.[7] The spatially-dependent morphology and bi-axial kinematics endow the ant mandible multifunctionality.

They build their nests with the entrance hole on sloped earth under forest shade. The nests have about 8 to 70 individuals in multiple chambers. Workers and queens mostly stayed in the upper chamber while nest chambers are below them and these disc-shaped chambers are connected by a single thin column or funnel with a hole just enough for one ant to pass through.[8] Workers are known to lay infertile trophic eggs which are laid for feeding the reproductives.[9]

References

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  1. ^ Cat. vi (1858):82
  2. ^ General, David Emmanuel M. (2016). "A review of the ant genus Harpegnathos Jerdon, 1851 (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) in the Philippines, with the description of two new species". Halteres. 7: 99–105.
  3. ^ a b Bolton, B. (2015). "Harpegnathos". AntCat. Retrieved 5 January 2015.
  4. ^ Bingham, C.T. 1903.The Fauna of British India, Including Ceylon and Burma. Hymenoptera. Ants and cuckoo-wasps. Vol. 2 London : Taylor & Francis.
  5. ^ Wei, Zhang (2020). "Multifunctional mandibles of ants: Variation in gripping behavior facilitated by specific microstructures and kinematics". Journal of Insect Physiology. 120: 103993. doi:10.1016/j.jinsphys.2019.103993. PMID 31836493. S2CID 209358666.
  6. ^ Wei, Zhang; et, al. (2020). "A mathematical modeling method elucidating the integrated gripping performance of ant mandibles and bio-inspired grippers". Journal of Bionic Engineering. 17 (4): 732–746. doi:10.1007/s42235-020-0065-9. S2CID 220503041.
  7. ^ Wei, Zhang; et, al. (2021). "Double-rowed teeth: design specialization of the H. venator ants for enhanced tribological stability". Bioinspiration & Biomimetics. 16 (5): 055003. doi:10.1088/1748-3190/ac124a. PMID 34233306. S2CID 235768522.
  8. ^ Crosland, Michael W. J. (1995). "Nest and colony structure in the primitive ant, Harpegnathos venator (Smith) (hymenoptera: formicidae)". Pan-Pacific entomologist. 71: 18–23.
  9. ^ Sunittra Aupanun; Obika, Mitsuhiro; Riou Mizuno; Weeyawat Jaitrong; Piyawan Suttiprapan; Rosli Hashim; Fuminori Ito (2022). "Trophic eggs in three ponerine ant species: Harpegnathos venator, Odontomachus simillimus and Odontoponera denticulata". Asian Myrmecology. 15: 1–10. doi:10.20362/AM.015001.
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