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Bug of the Week is written by "The Bug Guy," Michael J. Raupp, Professor of Entomology at the University of Maryland.

Beware of small pits: Antlions, Family Myrmeleontidae

 

Wicked jaws of the antlion larva capture victims and suck their blood.  

 

A popular residential design of homes like mine built in the 1950s featured roofs with large overhangs. These overhangs do a marvelous job of deflecting rainwater away from the foundation and, as an added benefit, they create a veritable desert just beneath the overhang. Some of you may recall a desert scene from George Lucas’s Return of the Jedi where a terrifying multi-toothed creature called a Sarlacc inhabited a pit on Tatooine where it dined on hapless Jedi Knights. Each year miniature versions of the Sarlaccian pits appear in the dusty desert beneath my overhang as dozens of craters about the size of half dollars pockmark the ground. One of my curious pastimes is to watch ants, beetles, and other small ground dwelling arthropods stumble into the craters and tumble down the slope.

Conical pits spell danger for ants and other small ground-dwelling arthropods.

At the base of this cone of death lies a ferocious predator – the antlion. The antlion larva, affectionately known as a doodlebug, constructs its funnel-shaped trap by backing into sandy soil and carefully flicking soil particles with its mouthparts until a symmetrical pit forms.  Small ground-dwelling arthropods like ants fall into the pit and tumble to the bottom. At the base of the pit just beneath the sand, the antlion awaits its prey. Sensing that someone has dropped in for dinner, the antlion clamps the ill-fated victim in a lethal embrace with powerful jaws. The victim is often dragged entirely beneath the sand as the antlion enjoys its feast.

The antlion’s jaws bear a groove used to channel blood from the living victim to the belly of the beast. After consuming the liquid portion of the prey, the antlion tosses the carcass from the pit with a snap of its head. Occasionally a large or lucky potential victim will evade the first strike and attempt a desperate scramble for freedom up the slope. To foil the escape, the antlion flicks sand from the base of the cone towards its prey. The displacement of sand creates a Lilliputian avalanche that carrys the prey down slope into the grasp of the antlion.

The gorgeous adult antlion will find a mate and return to the sandy soil to deposit eggs.

Adult antlions are rarely seen, but often mistaken for a damselfly or dragonfly. Feeding habits of these beautiful creatures are largely unknown other than that they consume soft-bodied insects and pollen. They are often attracted to outdoor lights at night. These delicate insects lay eggs in sandy soil where eggs hatch into subterranean monsters. Upon completing their development, antlions spin silken cocoons in the soil where the transformation from larva to pupa to adult takes place. So, while hiking in the desert, if you come across a deep conical pit, stay well back from the edge lest you tumble in. You never really know what waits at the bottom.

 

 

Among the carcasses of a beetle and a daddy-long-legs, a hapless field ant attempts a desperate scramble out of the antlion’s pit of death, all to no avail.

References

References for this Bug of the Week include “Effects of slope and particle size on ant locomotion: Implications for choice of substrate by antlions” by Jason Botz, Catherine Louden, Bradley Barger, Jeffrey Olafsen, and Don Steeples; and “Immature Insects” by Frederick Stehr. The inspiration for this Bug of the Week came from Adam Gruner who is always ready for an antlion adventure. 


Bug of the week Anniversary winners!

The first winner to correctly answer all of last week’s 10th Anniversary Bug Trivia questions hails from Nantes, France! Our other winners came from Alabama, Maryland, and our own fair campus in College Park. Follow the link below to last week’s webpage to find out the answers to the questions. Congratulations to our winners and thank you for reading Bug of the Week!