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Wednesday, June 06, 2012

Polyrhachis dives

Polyrhachis dives is a common polygynous monomophic arboreal weaver ant. Nests of Polyrhachis dives weaved together using ant's silk and vegetation are found in trees as well as among shrubs and tall grasses.


A worker of Polyrhachis dives.
A worker of Polyrhachis dives

A worker of Polyrhachis dives.
A worker of Polyrhachis dives

A worker of Polyrhachis dives.

A worker of Polyrhachis dives.
A worker of Polyrhachis dives

A worker of Polyrhachis dives.
A worker of Polyrhachis dives

A worker of Polyrhachis dives.
A worker of Polyrhachis dives

A worker of Polyrhachis dives.

A worker of Polyrhachis dives.
A worker of Polyrhachis dives

A worker of Polyrhachis dives.
A worker of Polyrhachis dives

A worker of Polyrhachis dives.
A worker of Polyrhachis dives

Nest of Polyrhachis dives.
Nest of Polyrhachis dives





See also:
Polyrhachis armata
Polyrhachis australis 252372
Polyrhachis furcata 111117
Polyrhachis ypsilon 84558



Taxonomy
Kingdom - Animalia
Phylum - Arthropoda
Subphylum - Hexapoda
Class - Insecta
Subclass - Pterygota
Infraclass - Neoptera
Order - Hymenoptera
Suborder - Apocrita
Infraorder - Aculeata
Superfamily - Vespoidea
Family - Formicidae -- ants, fourmis
Subfamily - Formicinae
Tribe - Camponotini
Genus - Polyrhachis (Smith, 1857)
Species - dives


Last Updated: 2012 07 29
First Posted 2012 06 06
© 2009 - 2012 Quah. All rights reserved.

2 comments:

  1. I photographed a ant species of which I suspect its a member of the polyarchis family somewhere in february in Java. I cannot figure out what species it is however, it comes closest to a dives. Maybe I can send you the pics?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Mark. Received your photos. they are not too clear but sufficient to tell (from their thorax) that those are not P. dives.

      Delete

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