Carebara Explained

Carebara is a genus of ants in the subfamily Myrmicinae. It is one of the largest myrmicine genera with more than 200 species distributed worldwide in the tropics and the Afrotropical region. Many of them are very tiny cryptic soil and leaf-litter inhabitants. They nest in rotten wood to which the bark is still adherent in the Afrotropical region, or may be lestobiotic nesting near other ant species. Some species are known to exist parasitically within termite nests. Little is known about the biology of the genus, but they are notable for the vast difference in size between queens and workers.[1] [2]

Species

Notes and References

  1. Aldawood . A. . Sharaf . M. . Taylor . B. . First record of the myrmicine ant genus Carebara Westwood, 1840 (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) from Saudi Arabia with description of a new species, C. abuhurayri sp. n. . 10.3897/zookeys.92.770 . ZooKeys . 2011 . 92 . 21594112. 3084545. 61–69. free . 2011ZooK...92...61A .
  2. Web site: Wild. Alex. Ants use their flattened heads as doors to lock down their nests. New Scientist. 18 November 2015. 11 November 2015.