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Kangaroo Island ants ‘play dead’ to avoid predators

University of South Australia (UniSA) Media Release

They’re well known for their industrious work, but now a species of ant on Kangaroo Island is also showing that it is skilled at ‘playing dead’, a behaviour that University of South Australia researchers believe is a recorded world first.

Accidentally discovered as researchers were checking pygmy-possum and bat nest boxes on Kangaroo Island, a colony of Polyrhachis femorata ants appeared to be dead… until one moved.

Researchers believe the ants were ‘playing dead’ as a defensive strategy to avoid potential danger.

Published by CSIRO, this is the first time that a whole colony of ants has been recorded feigning death, and the first record of the Polyrhachis femorata ant species for South Australia.

Wildlife ecologist, UniSA’s Associate Professor S. ‘Topa’ Petit, says she was surprised to discover a colony of what appeared to be dead ants in one of the nest boxes.

“The mimicry was perfect,” Assoc Professor Petit says. “When we opened the box, we saw all these dead ants… and then one moved slightly.

“This sort of defensive immobility is known among only a few ant species – in individuals or specific casts – but we don’t know of other instances when it’s been observed for entire colonies.

“In some of the boxes containing colonies of Polyrhachis femorata, some individuals took a while to stop moving, and others didn’t stop. The triggers for the behaviour are difficult to understand.”

Assoc Prof Petit says that nest boxes may present an opportunity to study the ants’ death-feigning behaviours, which are of great interest to many behavioural ecologists investigating a diversity of animal species.

The discovery was made during the Kangaroo Island Nest Box Project, where 901 box cavities have been monitored across 13 diverse properties as part of wildlife recovery efforts following the devastating 2020 bushfires.

Co-researcher at the Kangaroo Island Research Station, Peter Hammond, says that he used to call the Nest Box Project ‘Friends of the Invertebrates’, because invertebrates were often the only occupants of the bat and pygmy-possum nest boxes.

“We are learning a lot about invertebrates as well as targeted vertebrates,” Hammond says.

“Most of our several hundred boxes are on burnt ground, but we also have some on unburnt properties as controls because our aim is to determine the value of nest boxes in bushfire recovery.

Polyrhachis femorata is strongly associated with the critically endangered Narrow-Leaf Mallee community, where it colonised several boxes very quickly. However, we also have records for two other properties further west, indicating that the ants will use other habitats.

“We believe that the Polyrhachis femorata species was strongly affected by the bushfires.”

Assoc Prof Petit says there is a lot to discover about this species.

Polyrhachis femorata is a beautiful arboreal ant that tends to be quite shy, but little else is known about its ecology or behaviour,” Assoc Prof Petit says.

“We have a relatively unknown world of ants under our feet and in the trees. Ants provide crucial ecosystem services and are a vital part of functional ecosystems on Kangaroo Island and elsewhere.

“It is very exciting that such an endearing species as Polyrhachis femorata is living on Kangaroo Island and we look forward to finding out more about its ecology.

“We have no doubt that other ants with similar death-feigning behaviours will be discovered in Australia, but it is thrilling to be among the pioneers.”

 

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5 comments

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  1. New England Cocky

    Would this be another good reason to visit Kangaroo Island to check out the marine life and recovery research work after the 2020 disastrous bushfires?

  2. Canguro

    On the back of the megafires that destroyed so much of the southeastern section of this continent in 2020, the CSIRO has just released a book titled Australia’s Megafires, linked here, and available for free download as pdf chapters for those who might care to avail themselves of this generous opportunity.

  3. Michael Taylor

    NEC, when on the farm on Kangaroo Island we found the ants to be more reliable than the BoM. By watching the activity of the ants they’d ‘tell’ us if it was going to rain.

    Except the ones playing dead, of course.

  4. leefe

    There are also female dragonflies that will play dead in order to deter overly persistent male suitors. Make of that what you will.

  5. Roswell

    As a kid I used to play dead whenever I saw a large spider. So did they.

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