This species is found in mature lowland rainforest, where it is a resident of the high canopy. It is not common, but when workers are encountered they are conspicuous because of their large size and distinctive appearance. I most often encounter workers in treefalls.
I have seen one nest of this species. It was at Sirena in Corcovado National Park, in a 1-day old treefall. The tree was large, an Inga species with blood-red sap. Cephalotes workers were scattered thinly over the tree. Many workers were clustered around a nest entrance in a 30cm diameter branch, about half-way up the tree. I cut the branch open and collected the entire contents (alive) except for very small brood. This included minors, majors, a single dealate queen, an alate queen, and many males. The nest was a baseball-sized cavity in the center of a live branch. The entrance was through a rotten knot-hole. The entrance channel was plugged by a solid mass of ants, and the inside walls of the cavity were covered with a solid layer of ants. Water had collected in the bottom of the cavity, and it looked like there was much drowning brood in the bottom. I kept the colony alive for a while, in a plastic dish. The workers moved the brood into a petri dish covered with aluminum foil. They seemed to keep a lot of liquid around the brood.
The biology of alfaroi is probably similar to that of atratus, for which there are more published observations. See under atratus for additional natural history information.
Panama, Costa Rica. Costa Rica: in lowland rainforest sites throughout the country, to 500m elevation.
Minor worker: eyes situated beneath the antennal scrobe, which extends above it to the vertex margin; frontal carinae not completely covering the genae; the entire border of the frontal carinae distinctly crenulated, with short, thick, somewhat clubbed setae projecting from the notches; the outer vertex spine, if present, with a laterally projecting denticule from its base, or without an outer spine, and the lateral denticule projecting from the sides of the head; CI less than or equal to 122 (CI = 100 x head width/head length. Head width = maximum head width behind the eyes, including the vertexal spines or lamellae if present. Head length = head length measured dorsally on the sagittal plane).
Major worker: eyes situated beneath the antennal scrobe, which extends above it to the vertex margin; anterior face of pronotum and remaining dorsal surface of mesosoma separated by a row of 4 stout spines, the two surfaces each flat and meeting at an obtuse angle.
Taxonomic history
[Also described as new by Emery, 1894l PDF: 59.].Combination in Cephalotes: Emery, 1914b PDF: 39.See also: Kempf, 1951 PDF: 112.Junior synonym of Cephalotes serraticeps: Kempf, 1963c PDF: 437.Revived from synonymy: De Andrade & Baroni Urbani, 1999 PDF: 129.
Cephalotes alfaroi is a species of arboreal ant of the genus Cephalotes, characterized by an odd shaped head and the ability to "parachute" by steering their fall if they drop off of the tree they're on. Giving their name also as gliding ants.[1][2]
Cephalotes alfaroi is a species of arboreal ant of the genus Cephalotes, characterized by an odd shaped head and the ability to "parachute" by steering their fall if they drop off of the tree they're on. Giving their name also as gliding ants.
Cephalotes alfaroi est une espèce de fourmis arboricoles du genre Cephalotes, caractérisée par une tête surdimensionnée et plate ainsi que des pattes plus larges que leurs cousines terrestres. On la trouve principalement dans les forêts tropicales d'Amérique du sud et centrale[1].
Cephalotes alfaroi est une espèce de fourmis arboricoles du genre Cephalotes, caractérisée par une tête surdimensionnée et plate ainsi que des pattes plus larges que leurs cousines terrestres. On la trouve principalement dans les forêts tropicales d'Amérique du sud et centrale.
Cephalotes alfaroi is een mierensoort uit de onderfamilie van de Myrmicinae.[1][2] De wetenschappelijke naam van de soort is voor het eerst geldig gepubliceerd in 1890 door Emery.
Bronnen, noten en/of referentiesCephalotes alfaroi é uma espécie de inseto do gênero Cephalotes, pertencente à família Formicidae.[1]
Cephalotes alfaroi é uma espécie de inseto do gênero Cephalotes, pertencente à família Formicidae.