Gallery Links
Users Online
· Guests Online: 36

· Members Online: 0

· Total Members: 5,060
· Newest Member: Amee
Forum Threads
Theme Switcher
Switch to:
Last Seen Users
· bradbarnd00:20:39
· Ira Orlicek02:02:48
· binturong02:59:05
· weia04:42:48
· John Carr04:42:55
· Juergen Peters05:15:40
· Nosferatumyia05:40:19
· evdb05:51:33
· libor05:54:47
· Tramage07:32:19
Latest Photo Additions
View Thread
Diptera.info :: Identification queries :: Other insects, spiders, etc.
 Print Thread
What's on the ants back?
LordV
#1 Print Post
Posted on 21-10-2005 06:59
Member

Location:
Posts: 673
Joined: 06.09.05

Pic of an ant doing it's thing with aphids, but what is on the ants back?
Not sure if they are just shed aphid skins (bit of a coincidence that they are standing up) or something else.
Brian V.

lordv.smugmug.com/photos/40800828-L.jpg
 
LordV
#2 Print Post
Posted on 22-10-2005 18:31
Member

Location:
Posts: 673
Joined: 06.09.05

Someone on another forum suggested they were baby aphids, but I can't imagine the ants transporting them like that!
 
Nikita Vikhrev
#3 Print Post
Posted on 22-10-2005 18:39
User Avatar

Member

Location: Moscow, Russia
Posts: 9475
Joined: 24.05.05

But antenae! Collembola's antenae.
But if collembola, it is colourless collembola which means that normaly its live underground in ants nest.
I'm not sure at all, it is my guess only.
Nikita Vikhrev - Zool Museum of Moscow University
 
Paul Beuk
#4 Print Post
Posted on 22-10-2005 19:55
User Avatar

Super Administrator

Location: Netherlands
Posts: 19403
Joined: 11.05.04

I think the antennae may be just why aphids were suggested. I though about them, too, but I had to little definite characters to say they are for certain.
Young nymphs of aphids can certainly have those broad, somewhat tapering terminal antennal segments.
Paul

- - - -

Paul Beuk on https://diptera.info
 
diptera.info
LordV
#5 Print Post
Posted on 23-10-2005 20:54
Member

Location:
Posts: 673
Joined: 06.09.05

Thanks for the suggestions so far.
I'm not sure if they are just accidents or are parasitising the ant or are part of the ant/aphod symbiotic relationship.
Not sure if it helps -here is another pic of the same ant.

lordv.smugmug.com/photos/41209974-L.jpg
Brian V.
Edited by LordV on 23-10-2005 20:59
 
LordV
#6 Print Post
Posted on 25-03-2007 21:25
Member

Location:
Posts: 673
Joined: 06.09.05

Just to update this thread- the tiny bugs have been ID'd as springtails.
Brian v.
 
Toby
#7 Print Post
Posted on 26-03-2007 22:48
User Avatar

Member

Location: SW LONDON
Posts: 552
Joined: 12.01.07

Think I would have guessed Springtail but what a weird situation to find them....great shots. I presume Frans ID'd the species for you?
 
Andrew Whittington
#8 Print Post
Posted on 27-03-2007 15:39
User Avatar

Member

Location: Snowdonia
Posts: 110
Joined: 30.01.07

I'd go for Collembola too; aren't they too small for aphid nymphs or that species of aphid?
-----o0o-----
Andrew E. Whittington
https://flyevidence.co.uk/
 
Xespok
#9 Print Post
Posted on 27-03-2007 19:50
User Avatar

Member

Location: Debrecen, Hungary
Posts: 5551
Joined: 02.03.05

I think they are Collembolan nymphs.
Gabor Keresztes

Japan Wildlife Gallery
Carpathian Basin Wildlife Gallery
 
Teglagyar u. 30.
Jump to Forum:
Similar Threads
Thread Forum Replies Last Post
Fly with strange behaviour nearby ants => Milichia speciosa Diptera (adults) 5 15-05-2023 17:23
Ants on dead wasp Other insects, spiders, etc. 7 01-04-2022 17:44
Phoridae ♂ with spiny back -> Megaselia rufipes Diptera (adults) 3 26-03-2022 22:02
Chironomidae with hairy stripes on its back Diptera (adults) 5 08-03-2022 10:38
Shiny back Diptera (adults) 3 26-07-2020 09:13
Date and time
14 September 2025 03:52
Login
Username

Password



Not a member yet?
Click here to register.

Forgotten your password?
Request a new one here.
Temporary email?
Due to fact this site has functionality making use of your email address, any registration using a temporary email address will be rejected.

Paul
Donate
Please, help to make
Diptera.info
possible and enable
further improvements!
Latest Articles
Syrph the Net
Those who want to have access to the Syrph the Net database need to sign the
License Agreement -
Click to Download


Public files of Syrph the Net can be downloaded HERE

Last updated: 25.08.2011
Shoutbox
You must login to post a message.

08.09.25 16:17
Anyone has this article'A REVISION OF SPECIES OF THE GENUS CADREMA WALKER (DIPTERA, CHLOROPIDAE) FROM ISLANDS IN THE INDIAN OCEAN'? Smile

24.08.25 16:55
Thanks for your proposal, but for me this option is ineligible.

15.08.25 10:15
For those specialists not active on Facebook, I just ask to consider to join our group on FB. Please, be aware that it is not necessary at all to be active on FB outside the diptera group. Actually, n

15.08.25 10:13
We received requests to get permission to ask for ID in our Facebook group, https://www.facebo
ok.com/groups/1798
95332035235/ Until now we pointed to diptera.info, but since Paul's passing we not

23.06.25 18:10
If you have some spare money, there is a copy (together with keys to pupae and larvae) for sale by Hermann L. Strack, Loguivy Plougras, France

23.06.25 11:18
Appreciate it, Tony Irwin! I got the hint to use the key next to Langton and Pinder key for females of Chironomidae. So no specific queries, except the keys... I will keep this on my list and hope th

19.06.25 15:33
I have the hard copy book, if you have any specific queries, but I'm not scanning the 500+ pages!

02.06.25 18:26
Anyone has "Chironomidae of the Holarctic region. Keys and diagnoses. Part 3. Adult Males Entomologica Scandinavica Supplement 34"? smolwaarneming@gma
il.com

28.05.25 20:57
I have Russian Coenosia. nikita6510@ya.ru

28.05.25 12:25
Is someone able to share with me "A key to the Russian species of the genus Coenosia"?

Render time: 1.45 seconds | 240,408,871 unique visits