Rhytidoponera

These are some of the most common ants in Australia but are less common elsewhere elsewhere where they occur. They are found throughout Australia and can be very abundant, especially in urban areas such as yards, gardens and parks. Some species, especially those found in forested areas, generally forage during the day while many of the arid zone species forage primarily in the evening and at night. In forested areas they will forage on low vegetation and trees as well as on the ground. They are general predators or scavengers, with some also taking honeydew and others showing a strong preference for seeds. Workers generally forage singly or less often in small groups. Some of the smaller species have a potent sting while others, including the larger species, have a weak sting or are unable to sting.

Nests are generally in soil either in the open or under rocks or other objects on the ground. When in the open, nests range from low and messy mounds to large mounds decorated with stones and small twigs or leaves. Species found in wet sclerophyll and rainforest often nest in rotten wood. Some rainforest species will occasionally nest arboreally (although they nest on the ground as well).

Most species lack queens and instead have fertilised workers which produce brood. In some, where true queens are present, the queens may be replaced by fertilised workers when they die.

Identification
The forward sections of the frontal lobes and the antennal sockets are separated by the broadly rounded or triangular rearward extension of the clypeus. The leading edge of the pronotum on each side just above the front legs with a small angular tooth or spine. The node of the petiole has distinct front, top and rear faces. The tips of the tibiae of the hind legs each have either a single small, simple or comb-like (pectinate) spur, or two spurs, one large and comb-like (pectinate) and one small and simple (best viewed from the front). The claws on the hind legs have a tooth at about the middle of their inner surface.

Rhytidoponera is most similar to Heteroponera in overall body shape and size. However, the claws in Rhytidoponera have a small tooth along their inner margins while in Heteroponera the claws are simple.

Species richness
Species richness by country based on regional taxon lists (countries with darker colours are more species-rich). View Data



Castes


Worker of R. metallica from Queensland.



Worker of R. nodifera from Queensland.



Worker of R. punctigera from Western Australia.

Male Morphology
{{Male Morphology
 * Antennal Segment Count = 13
 * Antennal Club = 0
 * Palp Formula = 6,4;5,3; 4,3
 * Total Dental Count = 9-18
 * Spur Formula = 2 (1 simple, 1 simple-pectinate);2 (1 simple, 1 pectinate);2 simple, 2 (1 simple, 1 pectinate); 1 barbulate-pectinate

Nomenclature

 *  RHYTIDOPONERA [Ectatomminae: Ectatommini]
 * Rhytidoponera Mayr, 1862: 731 [as subgenus of Ectatomma]. Type-species: Ponera araneoides, by subsequent designation of Emery, 1911d: 37.
 * [Type-species not Ponera metallica, incorrect subsequent designation by Wheeler, W.M. 1911f: 172; see Wheeler, W.M. 1913a: 79.]
 * Rhytidoponera junior synonym of Ectatomma: Roger, 1863b: 17.
 * Rhytidoponera revived from synonymy as subgenus of Ectatomma: Mayr, 1863: 453; Dalla Torre, 1893: 23.
 * Rhytidoponera raised to genus: Emery, 1897d: 547; Emery, 1911d: 36.
 * Rhytidoponera senior synonym of Chalcoponera: Brown, 1953c: 2; Brown, 1958g: 198.
 * CHALCOPONERA [junior synonym of Rhytidoponera]
 * Chalcoponera Emery, 1897d: 548. Type-species: Ponera metallica, by subsequent designation of Emery, 1911d: 39.
 * Chalcoponera junior synonym of Rhytidoponera: Brown, 1953c: 2.

Additional References

 * [[Media:Briese&Macauley 1981.pdf|Briese, D. T., Macauley, B. J. (1981). Food collection within an ant community in semi-arid Australia, with special reference to seed harvesters. Australian Journal of Ecology, 6: 1–19.PDF]]
 * Brown, S. G. A., Heddle, R. J. (2003). Prevention of anaphylaxis with ant venom immunotherapy. Current Opinion in Allergy and Clinical Immunology 3:511–516.
 * Brown, W. L., Jr. (1953). Characters and synonymies among the genera of ants. Part I. Breviora 11:1–13.
 * Brown, W. L., Jr. (1954). Systematic and other notes on some of the smaller species of the ant genus Rhytidoponera Mayr. Breviora 33:1–11.
 * Brown, W. L., Jr. (1958). Contributions toward a reclassification of the Formicidae. II. Tribe Ectatommini (Hymenoptera). Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology 118:173–362.
 * Cavill, G. W. K., Robertson, P. L. (1965). Ant venoms, attractants, and repellents. Science (Washington, D. C.) 149:1337–1345.
 * Clark, J. (1936). A revision of Australian species of Rhytidoponera Mayr (Formicidae). Memoirs of the National Museum of Victoria 9:14–89.
 * Crozier, R. H., Pamilo, P. (1986). Relatedness within and between colonies of a queenless ant species of the genus Rhytidoponera (Hymenoptera: Formicidae). Entomologia Generalis 11:113–117.
 * Davidson, D. W., Morton, S. R. (1981). Myrmecochory in some plants (F. chenopodiaceae) of the Australian arid zone. Oecologia (Berlin) 50:357–366.
 * Eastwood, R. (2004). Successive replacement of tending ant species at aggregations of scale insects (Hemiptera: Margarodidae and Eriococcidae) on Eucalyptus in south-east Queensland. Australian Journal of Entomology 43:1–4.
 * Fiedler, K. (2001). Ants that associate with Lycaeninae butterfly larvae: diversity, ecology and biogeography. Diversity and Distributions 7:45–60.
 * Haskins, C. P. (1970). Researches on the biology and social behavior of primitive ants. pp. 356–388 in Aronson, L. R., Tobach, E., Lehrman, D. S., Rosenblatt, J. S. Development and evolution of behavior. Essays in memory of T. C. Schneirla. Freeman.
 * Hughes, L., Westoby, M. (1992). Effect of diaspore characteristics on removal of seeds adapted for dispersal by ants. Ecology 73:1300–1312.
 * Hughes, L., Westoby, M. (1992). Fate of seeds adapted for dispersal by ants in Australian sclerophyll vegetation. Ecology 73:1285–1299.
 * Lattke, J. E. (1994). Phylogenetic relationships and classification of ectatommine ants. Entomologica Scandinavica 25:105–119.
 * Maschwitz, U., Go, C., Dorow, W. H. O., Buschinger, A. and Kohout, R. J. (2003). Polyrhachis loweryi (Formicinae): A guest ant parasitizing Rhytidoponera sp. (Ponerinae) in Queensland, Australia. Insectes Sociaux 50:69–76.
 * Nipperess, D. A., Beattie, A. J. (2004). Morphologcial dispersion of Rhytidoponera assemblages: The importance of spatial scale and null model. Ecology (10)85:2728–2736.
 * Stevens, M. M., James, D. G., O'Malley, K. J., Coombes, N. E. (1998). Seasonal variations in foraging by ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) in two New South Wales citrus orchards. Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture 38:889–896.
 * Ward, P. S. (1980). A systematic revision of the Rhytidoponera impressa group (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) in Australia and New Guinea. Australian Journal of Zoology 28:475–498.
 * Ward, P. S. (1980). Genetic variation and population differentiation in the Rhytidoponera impressa group, a species complex of ponerine ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae). Evolution 34:1060–1076.
 * Ward, P. S. (1984). A revision of the ant genus Rhytidoponera (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) in New Caledonia. Australian Journal of Zoology 32:131–175.
 * Wilson, E. O. (1958). Studies on the ant fauna of Melanesia, III: Rhytidoponera in western Melanesia and the Moluccas; IV: The tribe Ponerini. Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology 119:300–371.