Spanish ants are using other species as “sexual livestock” to expand across Europe. And it’s working for them

Nature has given us many ways to reproduce. From the simplest mechanism (clonality) to really very elaborate systems of sexual reproduction: where some species generate males and females, others produce a huge number of ‘morphs’ depending on the season, population density or social caste. But in all these cases, even the most complex ones, “the phenotypes produced by a female invariably belong to the same species.” Or so we believed. Because the Spanish ants have done so by jumping that “apparently universal restriction” into the air and are taking advantage of it to domesticate other species at will. They are doing what? As it sounds: after examining more than 120 populations and sequences of almost 400 different individuals, researchers from the University of Montpellier they came to the conclusion that the queens of Messor ibericus they are cloning males Messor structor to create hybrid workers that allow them to progressively expand throughout Europe. Evidently, although these hybrid workers are used as the workforce of the anthill, we are not talking about a system of slavery of other species analogous to the human systems of ancient times. However, it is fun and very interesting. Juvé et al. (2025) Why is this happening? When we talk about cocial insects, colonies function almost as if they were factories: if there are no workers, there is no nest, no food, and no viable reproduction. What happens in this case is that (according to the researchers) the queens of the Messor ibericus They cannot produce viable workers without the genetic contribution of other species. And, without thinking twice, they do it. Why is it important? For many reasons, but above all because it opens up an incredible melon: it brings back to the debate table the real meaning of “being a species.” It also forces us to rethink what we know about sexual reproduction and allows us to understand colonies as ‘superorganisms’ that are much more complex than we believed until now. So… can we really talk about sexual domestication? In this context, ‘sexual domestication’ appears as a visual metaphor of a complex process. However, there is no doubt that the appearance of colonies with internal reproductive ‘livestock’ changes the rules of the game. And not only on a scientific level: the fact that they are gaining ground throughout the continent shows that the strategy is successful. Very successful. Towards a European hegemony of the Spanish ant… No no. We can hardly say that. Today, all the ants on the continent are experiencing a real invasion: that of the Argentine or red fire ants. This is a biological invasion linked to globalization. In this case, what is happening is that by freeing yourself from dependence on M. builder (because it can produce reserves of its genetic material without needing colonies of this species), the M. ibericus They can move with complete freedom and that means they are moving into new and unexplored territories. But the complete battle, facing the fire ant, is yet to come. And they are already losing it. Image | Phil Honle In Xataka | New species of insects are not discovered in exotic places: we have just found two new ants in Andalusia

We have just found two new ants in Andalusia

The list of animal species that inhabit Spain has added two new names. And this time we are not talking about exotic species imported from a distant country but about the discovery of two new species of ants in Andalusia. Two new species. He finding of the two new speciesboth belonging to the genre Oxyopomyrmexhas been in charge of the researcher at the University of Córdoba (UCO) Joaquín Reyes López. It’s about O. Arenarius and O. Pallensdiscovered thanks to specimens found in Jaén, Granada and Huelva (including Doñana National Park). Genre ants Oxyopomyrmex They are classified within the subfamily of the mirmicinos (Myrmicinae). These, explains Reyes López himself, can be found in the arid areas of the Mediterranean basin, although it is a taxonomic group on which there is little information. Until now we knew the presence of two species of this genus in Spain (O. Santschii and O. Saulcyi). This implies that the finding bends the number of species of this group known in the country. According to the University Through the EFE agencythe finding adds two new names to the list of about 300 species of ants that inhabit the Iberian Peninsula. Oxyopomyrmex arenarius. According to Kings López explains himselfthe name of this new species is a reference to the fact that all its nests were found in sandy soils. This species, whose “type location” is the Biological Station of the Doñana, presents an oval head, and a coloration that goes from the dark brown of its head and abdomen to lighter tones in its joints. Oxyopomyrmex Pallens. The color is precisely what gives name to the second of the described species, since it presents a more pale coloration, with light and yellowish brown tones in parts of the body of the insect. In this second case, the type town described by Reyes López is the Jienense municipality of Mures. Electronic scanning microscopy. For analysis, Reyes López He turned to the scanning electronic microscopy, a technique with which he could closely study the morphological characteristics of these ants and compare them with the features of other similar species. The details of the study have been published In an article In the magazine Insects. By limiting the territory. As is logical, there is still little what we know about these ants. For example, the findings suggest that these species are typical of the south of the Peninsula, but there is the possibility that their habitat will extend beyond, so the discovery of new specimens can serve us to know in more detail the extension of the territory occupied by the new species. In Xataka | Someone has calculated all the ants in the world. It is a literally “unimaginable” number Image | Reyes López, 2025/Insects / Protoculture

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