Jd. Mciver et T. Steen, USE OF A SECONDARY NEST IN GREAT-BASIN DESERT THATCH ANTS (FORMICA-OBSCURIPES FOREL), The Great Basin naturalist, 54(4), 1994, pp. 359-365
Workers of Great Basin Desert thatch ants (Formica obscuripes Forel) d
ig simple secondary nests at the base of plants upon which they tend a
phids and scales. These secondary nests house only foragers, with the
number of foragers occupying each nest positively correlated with the
number of worker-tended Homoptera feeding on plant foliage above. That
ch ant secondary nests are cooler than 25 cm below the dome top of the
primary nest and maintain a significantly more constant temperature t
han is observed on the ground surface or in the plant canopy. Thatch a
nt foragers use secondary nests for at least two purposes: as a cool r
efuge for Homoptera tenders when midday plant canopy temperatures rise
during the summer months, and as the primary place within which Homop
tera tenders transfer honeydew to larger ''honeydew transporters'' for
ultimate transport back to the primary nest.