bring their prey. Not all are predators: the South
American leaf-cutter ants form huge colonies with
subterranean fungus gardens, where they bring
slices of leaves to rot and grow the fungi that they
consume. They can defoliate whole trees.
Ant colonies represent a great opportunity:
safe, climate controlled, full of stored food and ant
larvae, but any beetle taking advantage of them
needs to get past the ants. Beetles of several
families have developed a suite of adaptations—
above | Limulodes (Ptiliidae)
Featherwinged beetles, these
from the USA, act as cleaners
in ant nests, eating fungi
and spores.
chemical and physical—to persuade ants
to ignore them, mistake them for
food, or even welcome them as
nest mates, as well as other
adaptations such as
shortening of limbs and
antennae, and fusing
of abdomen segments,
to protect them from
damage during rough
handling by the ants.
Animals that have
adapted to live with ants
are called myrmecophiles
(ant lovers) and can be
recognized by characteristics
including clumps of setae called
trichomes that provide food or
chemicals to the ants, fused segments,
short antennae, sometimes loss of pigmentation
or eyes, and, in some extreme cases, structures
that allow the ants to pick them up and carry
them without damage. We can even see such
characters in fossils, and can assume they must
be myrmecophiles without knowing their
actual biology.
Hundreds of species of beetles of many
families have become myrmecophiles, the most
common of these being Histeridae, Carabidae:
Paussinae, some Scarabaeoidea, and particularly
Staphylinidae of the subfamilies Aleocharinae
and Pselaphinae. The Pselaphinae tribe
Clavigerini are almost all compulsory ant
associates. Some myrmecophiles are scavengers
or cleaners, while others consume the ants’
resources, and a few eat the ants themselves
as well as their larvae.
opposite | Paussus
(Carabidae: Paussinae)
This highly modified ground
beetle, almost unrecognizable
compared to its surface-living
relatives, has many chemical
and physical adaptations in
order to survive in ant nests.