Liometopum apiculatum

Liometopum apiculatum are common in the Utah Juniper and Pinyon Pine woodlands on Black Mesa. Workers can be identified by the long erect hairs on the pronotum. If disturbed in the field, these ants will emit a strong noxious odor. Workers are polymorphic with the largest individuals approaching the size of small Formica workers.

Identification
Polymorphic workers. Light yellow-brown to dark brown with an abundance of short erect to appressed hairs. The body is covered with a dense pubescence, a feature that partially explains the common name for ants in this genus - "velvety tree ants." Liometopum apiculatum can be separated from the co-occurring congener Liometopum luctuosum by a number of features: the workers are lighter relative to the darker colored luctuosum, the hairs on the top of the pronotum are longer and more abundant, and the largest workers in a colony are noticeably larger than the largest luctuosum workers.

Distribution
United States, Mexico. Southwestern United States and from northwestern to southeastern Mexico.

Distribution based on Regional Taxon Lists
Nearctic Region: United States. Neotropical Region: Mexico.



Habitat
Occurs sporadically in creosotebush scrub and grasslands, up to sagebrush zones and becomes much more common at higher elevations (1900m) in oak forests (most common habitat), pinyon pine, up to ponderosa pine and riparian sites. (Mackay and Mackay 2002)

Biology
Liometopum apiculatum exist in populous colonies. They can form long and very busy trails that are used for foraging or to connect segments of their polydomous nest. Established trail routes can persist for many years (Shapley 1920). Foraging columns can also be located under the ground and litter, surfacing underneath ground level objects such as rocks and downed wood.

Additional Notes Large colonies of up to 85,000 individuals and aggressive workers help make Liometopum apiculatum a dominant species in its favored habitats. They are abundant in various oak habitat associations that occur from 1000 - 2500 m and in some high elevation (~2000 - 2500 m) pinyon pine, ponderosa pine and riparian areas. Foragers are opportunistic (omnivorous) and will prey upon other organisms. Workers are highly excitable and when a colony or nest fragment is disturbed they burst forth, emitting a noxious alarm pheromone, and quickly swarm upon any unwitting myrmecologists found near the nest. Colonies are rarely investigated because both finding and excavating a nest can be difficult. Foraging trails often disappear into inaccessible holes (e.g. around the roots at the base of a tree) or into a cavity that is more a satellite location where some workers congregate rather than a part of the nest. Workers disappearing under a rock that can be flipped over, for example, are typically found to be using the covering object to make their way into one of their underground trails. In some cases these cavities will contain numerous workers, but no brood, and digging reveals there are no additional nest chambers nearby. When the main section of the nest is found, or suspected to be located, it may be situated in a tree bole or under a large rock. Liometopum apiculatum queens are among the largest North America ants. Their large size is likely an adaptation for claustral nest founding in what can be a harsh environment for most insects. Associations with other species Workers are known to tend membracids and aphids. They will also visits extrafloral nectaries of some Agave, Yucca and Opuntia plants. In the case of Opuntia imbricata, Liometopum apiculatum provides protective services to the plant. Workers have been shown to be effective at reducing herbivore damage to these plants. Workers will follow the trails of other ant species. In concert with this behavior, workers have been observed successfully soliciting food from of Pogonomyrmex barbatus, Camponotus sayi and Solenopsis xyloni foragers.

Associates found living in the nests of Liometopum apiculatum include a weevil, Liometophilus, a cricket species and a variety of beetle species. A few of the latter are putatively obligate as they are only known from their nest association with this ant.

Foraging
Rafael-Valdez et al. (2017) - A study of 31 colonies in the southern Chihuahuan desert (Mexico) found colonies maintained from 1 to 6 (average = 3.7) active foraging trails that led to a plant or patch of vegetation, with an average travel distance of 38.6 m. Favored plants for foraging workers were Yucca (palm tree), Agave salmiana (agave) and Opuntia rastrera (prickly pear). Longer distances and hence greater foraging effort were observed for Yucca plants. This suggested the palms, with their infestations of scale insects, provided a rich source of honeydew. Harvesting of larvae for sale as escamoles appears to be reducing the abundance of this ant in the study area.

Liometopum apiculatum brood are a Mexican delicacy known as "escamoles." This food was once used as tribute presented to Aztec Emperors. Today the market demand for brood can be so high that local ant populations of this species are reduced by over-collecting. A typical meal that serves up escamoles is 2 tacos with ~ 50 grams of ants. "They are served fried or with black butter, but the best way is fried with onions and garlic."
 * Unusual and Noteworthy

New Mexico
Mackay and Mackay (2002) - This species nests under stones and in trunks of living and dead trees (especially oaks) and dead Yucca spp. stalks. It is polydomous with segments of nests scattered over the landscape under stones and logs. It is the dominant ant in most of the oak forests in the state and can be easily found foraging on the sides of oak trees. This species is predaceous, collects dead insects and tends Homoptera. It is extremely pugnacious and attacks without hesitation. Although it does not sting, it can be very irritating due to bites by large numbers of individuals. Sexuals occur in nests from May to August. Males and females were collected on the ground in June to August, foundress females were commonly collected in July and August under stones, cow manure or logs. They can be found from March to September, one was collected in December. This species nests together with Paratrechina austroccidua, Lasius sitiens (several nests), Lasius pallitarsis, Tapinoma sessile, Forelius and Camponotus vicinus. Inquilines appear to be especially common in the nests of this species. The small cricket, Myrmecophila spp., commonly occurs in the nests throughout its range. Staphylinids including Apteronina schmitti Wasmann and Dinardilla liometopi Wasmann are also found in nests.

Castes

 * Worker

Nomenclature

 * masonium. Formica masonia Buckley, 1866: 165 (w.) U.S.A. Combination possibly in Liometopum: Wheeler, W.M. 1902f: 23. Incertae sedis in Dolichoderinae: Shattuck, 1994: 171. Incertae sedis in Liometopum: Bolton, 1995b: 247. Nomen oblitum, synonym of apiculatum: Del Toro, et al. 2009: 316.
 *  apiculatum. Liometopum apiculatum Mayr, 1870b: 961 (w.) MEXICO. Emery, 1895c: 331 (q.); Wheeler, W.M. 1905e: 324 (m.); Wheeler, G.C. & Wheeler, J. 1951: 181 (l.). Senior synonym of masonium: Del Toro, et al. 2009: 316. See also: Shattuck, 1994: 128.