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11 April 2019 Opportunistic Predation by Leaf-Cutting Ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) on a Wounded Baird's Tapir (Mammalia: Perissodactyla: Tapiridae) in Mexico
Jean-Paul Lachaud, Jonathan Pérez-Flores, Gabriela Pérez-Lachaud
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Abstract

Notwithstanding their specialized herbivorous diet, leaf-cutting ants opportunistically exploit temporary resources such as insect or vertebrate carcasses. We report on the first case of attine workers, Atta cephalotes (L.) (Hymenoptera: Formicidae), foraging on the scar tissues of a living vertebrate, a wounded female Baird's tapir, Tapirus bairdii (Gill) (Mammalia: Perissodactyla: Tapiridae). We put forward 2, not mutually exclusive, hypotheses to explain such behavior: (1) utilization by the leaf-cutting ants of these tissues as a resource that provides rare essential nutrients, and (2) opportunistic sampling of polymicrobial communities associated with the skin of the wounded animal in search of new strains of their associated actinobacteria.

Jean-Paul Lachaud, Jonathan Pérez-Flores, and Gabriela Pérez-Lachaud "Opportunistic Predation by Leaf-Cutting Ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) on a Wounded Baird's Tapir (Mammalia: Perissodactyla: Tapiridae) in Mexico," Florida Entomologist 102(1), 251-253, (11 April 2019). https://doi.org/10.1653/024.102.0145
Published: 11 April 2019
KEYWORDS
actinobacteria
Atta cephalotes
essential nutrients
foraging plasticity
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