This is a glossary of terms used in the descriptions of ants.
- alate
- winged reproductive male or female ant[1]
- Berlese funnel
see also Winkler extraction
device used to extract ants and other living organism from soil and leaf-litter samples; a sample is placed on a screen with a funnel beneath, and a heat source above; the drying forces the animals downwards, where they fall into a collecting jar, usually filled with alcohol[1]
- bivouac
- in army and driver ants, nest formed by the bodies of the ants themselves to protect the queen and larvae[1]
- dulosis
- see slave-making[1]
- dichthadiiform
- wingless queen with enlarged gaster, having a broadened head, very small eyes and worker-like alitrunk[2][3]
- domatium
see also myrmecodomatium
in plants, tiny chamber produced by plants to house arthropods[4]
- epigaeic
see also hypogaeic
living or foraging above the ground[1]
- ergate
- a member of the non-reproductive, laboring caste.
- ergatogyne
see also ergatoid
denotes any intercaste female morphologically intermediate between workers and (winged) queens, not restricted to the reproductive caste; formerly often used interchangeably to refer to ergatoid queens[5]
- ergatoid
see also ergatogyne
a wingless (dealate) reproductive adult ant, anatomically intermediate in form between workers and winged queens or males[5]
- fungivorous
- feeding on fungi[1]
- gamergate
- a mated, egg-laying, female worker in species lacking a queen[5]
- granivorous
- seed herbivory, feeding on grain[1]
- gyne
- a member of the female reproductive caste[1]
- haplometrosis
see also pleometrosis
colony founding by a single queen[6]
- hypogaeic
see also epigaeic
subterranean, living below the ground, or at least beneath the leaf litter, stones or dead bark[1]
- mermithergate
see also mermithogyne
"parasitogenic" phenotype of worker ants, caused by mermithid nematodes[7]
- mermithogyne
see also mermithergate
"parasitogenic" phenotype of gynes, caused by mermithid nematodes[7]
- monandry
see also polyandry
queen mating with a single male[8]
- monodomy
see also polydomy
colony housing arrangement in a single nest[9]
- monogyny
see also polygyny, primary monogyny, secondary monogyny
nest arrangement containing a single queen[6]
- multicoloniality
see also unicoloniality
nest arrangement of a population of ants consisting of multiple independent colonies (monodomous or polydomous)[9]
- myrmecochory
- seed dispersal by ants[10]
- myrmecodomatium
see also domatium
domatium housed by ants[4]
- myrmecologist
- a student of ants[1]
- myrmecology
- the study of ants[1]
- myrmecophily
- association of various organisms with ants[11]
- myrmecophyte
- plant that lives in a mutualistic association with ants[1]
- nanitic
- a worker of the first generation, usually smaller in size than subsequent generations[12]
- oligogyny
- nest arrangement with multiple queens, defined by worker tolerance towards all queens in the colony and antagonism among the queens[13]
- pheromone trail
see also domatium
trail of chemical compounds secreted by ants to guide nestmates to a target (usually food)[14]
- pilosity
- quality of being covered with hair[1]
- pleometrosis
see also haplometrosis
colony founding by multiple queens[6]
- plerergate
- see replete[15]
- polyandry
see also monandry
queen mating with multiple males[8]
- polydomy
see also monodomy
colony arrangement housed in multiple separate nests[9]
- polyethism
- division of labor, the development of different roles[16]
- polygyny
see also monogyny, primary polygyny, secondary polygyny
nest arrangement containing multiple queens[6]
- polymorphism
- in social insects, having more than one caste within the same sex[1]
- primary monogyny
see also monogyny
single queen founding a colony (haplometrosis), with no additional queens incorporated into the colony[6]
- primary polygyny
see also polygyny
colony founding by multiple queens (pleometrosis), with more than one queen surviving[6]
- replete
- worker ant that functions as a living larder, having an enlarged abdomen filled with liquid food[1]
- secondary monogyny
see also monogyny
colony founding by multiple queens (pleometrosis), a single queen survive[6]
- secondary polygyny
see also polygyny
colony founding by a single queen (haplometrosis), with additional queens incorporated into the colony at a later stage, usually by adoption or fusion with other colonies[6]
- slave-making
- the capture of brood of other ant species that is then reared as slaves[1]
- tandem running
see also pheromone trail
recruitment method used by some species of ants, where one ant leads a single, closely following nestmate to a target (usually food)[14]
- trail pheromone
- see pheromone trail
- trophallaxis
- transfer of liquid food among family members or guest organisms[1]
- trophic egg
- non-viable egg laid by the queen to be used as a source of nutrition[1]
- trophobiosis
- mutualistic relationships between ants and other insects[17]
- unicoloniality
see also multicoloniality
a population of ants inhabiting a single large polydomous colony[9]
see also Berlese funnel
device used to extract ants and other living organism from soil and leaf-litter samples; a sample is placed inside an inner bag constructed from cloth mesh, which is suspended in a second bag containing a funnel leading to a collecting jar, usually filled with alcohol; the device is hung up in the air and passively extracts escaping animals[1]
Agosti, Donat; Majer, Jonathan D.; Alonso, Leeanne E.; Schultz, Ted R., eds. (2000). Ants: Standard Methods for Measuring and Monitoring Biodiversity. Smithsonian Institution Press. ISBN 1-56098-885-1.
Schmidt, C. A; Shattuck, S. O. (2014). "The Higher Classification of the Ant Subfamily Ponerinae (Hymenoptera: Formicidae), with a Review of Ponerine Ecology and Behavior". Zootaxa. 3817 (1): 1–242. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.3817.1.1. PMID 24943802.
Brown, W. L. Jr. (1960). "Contributions toward a reclassification of the Formicidae. III Tribe Amblyoponini (Hymenoptera)". Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology. 122: 143–230.
Wheeler, W. M. (1907). "On certain modified hairs peculiar to the ants of arid regions". Biological Bulletin. 13 (4): 185–202. doi:10.2307/1535694. JSTOR 1535694.
Corn, M. L. (1980). "Polymorphism and polyethism in the neotropical ant Cephalotes atratus (L.)". Insectes Sociaux. 27 (1): 29–42. doi:10.1007/bf02224519. S2CID 6813618.