Pleometrosis
Guides
Acromyrmex versicolor
Desert Leaf-cutter Ant, Desert Leafcutting Ant
Acromyrmex versicolor is a desert-adapted leafcutter ant found in the Colorado and Sonoran deserts. Colonies exhibit pleometrosis, where multiple queens cooperate to found nests, though typically only one queen survives to establish a mature monogynous colony. Workers collect living and dead leaves to cultivate fungus gardens, the sole food source for the colony. The species is notable for forming large, distinctive nest craters covered with leaf fragments and for its flexible foraging behavior that shifts between diurnal and nocturnal activity depending on temperature.
Lasius emarginatus
ManhattAnt, Central European Bicolored Ant
Lasius emarginatus is a small formicine ant native to western Eurasia that has become a notable invasive species in North America. First discovered in New York City in 2011, it earned the nickname "ManhattAnt" and has since become one of the most common ants in the city, spreading at approximately 2 km per year into New Jersey and Long Island. Workers are distinguished by their reddish-brown thorax contrasting with darker brown head and abdomen. The species is increasingly reported as an indoor pest and forms mutualisms with honeydew-producing insects on street trees. Unlike many invasive ants, it does not display supercolonial behavior.
Mischocyttarus mexicanus
Mexican Paper Wasp
Mischocyttarus mexicanus is a New World paper wasp exhibiting facultative eusocial behavior, where females can nest either solitarily or in groups and may switch between these strategies throughout life. The species includes at least two subspecies: M. m. mexicanus ranging from Mexico to Costa Rica, and M. m. cubicola distributed across the southeastern United States and Caribbean. Nests are constructed from paper fibers and attached to vegetation, particularly palm fronds. The species serves as an important model for studying the evolutionary advantages of flexible social organization in insects.
Mycetomoellerius turrifex
Turret Fungus-farming Ant
Mycetomoellerius turrifex is a fungus-farming ant in the tribe Attini, known for cultivating mutualistic fungi in subterranean gardens. The species was transferred from Trachymyrmex to the newly erected genus Mycetomoellerius in 2019 based on molecular phylogenetic evidence. Colonies exhibit complex social dynamics, including the presence of non-inseminated queens that adopt worker-like behaviors. Colony foundation involves pleometrosis, where multiple queens cooperate to establish new nests.
Myrmecocystus mendax
honey ant, honeypot ant
Myrmecocystus mendax is a species of honeypot ant native to Mexico and the Southwestern United States. The species exhibits notable intraspecific variation in social organization: populations in the Sierra Ancha Mountains of central Arizona display primary polygyny with cooperative colony founding by multiple unrelated queens, while Chiricahua Mountains populations are predominantly monogynous with single-queen founding. Mature colonies in polygynous populations contain an average of 6.27 queens. The species produces specialized replete workers that serve as living food storage vessels.
Pogonomyrmex californicus
California harvester ant
Pogonomyrmex californicus is a seed-harvesting ant native to southwestern North America. It is the most widely distributed species in the genus Pogonomyrmex. The species exhibits a striking social polymorphism: most populations have single-queen colonies (monogyny), but some California populations show primary polygyny where multiple unrelated queens cooperate in colony founding and coexist in mature colonies. It possesses a powerful sting and has been used historically by Indigenous peoples for ritual and medicinal purposes. The species is a prominent model for studying the evolution of social behavior, cooperation, and epigenetic regulation of aggression.
Solenopsis geminata
tropical fire ant, Geminata-group fire ant
Solenopsis geminata, the tropical fire ant, is a native New World species with a broad distribution spanning the southern United States through Central and South America, and introduced populations across Asia, the Pacific Islands, and Africa. The species exhibits a foraging strategy tradeoff between discovery efficiency and competitive territorial dominance compared to its congener S. xyloni, with S. geminata being less efficient at resource discovery but superior in competitive encounters. Invasive populations demonstrate adaptive strategies to overcome inbreeding costs, including pleometrosis (cooperative colony founding by multiple queens) and execution of diploid male larvae. The species serves as host to Pseudacteon phorid fly parasitoids.
Veromessor
Veromessor Harvester Ants
Veromessor is a genus of North American harvester ants comprising ten species, all endemic to western and central North America. The genus was revived from synonymy with Messor by Ward et al. (2015). These ants exhibit striking ecological and morphological diversity despite the small number of species, including variation in colony size, foraging strategies, mating phenology, and colony founding modes. They serve as important ecological models, with some species studied extensively for their navigation systems and social behavior.
Veromessor pergandei
black harvester ant, desert harvester ant
Veromessor pergandei is a desert seed-harvester ant native to the southwestern United States and Baja California, Mexico. The species exhibits geographic variation in colony founding behavior: single queens (haplometrosis) in wetter western regions versus cooperative founding by multiple unrelated queens (pleometrosis) in drier eastern areas. Mature colonies contain over 35,000 workers and construct conspicuous nest disks with vegetation-cleared centers and fertile rims. The species plays significant ecological roles as a seed disperser, soil engineer, and prey species.