'' spider eating an
alate. The spider mimics the ant (
Wasmannian mimicry) both to avoid predators (
Batesian mimicry) and to deceive its ant prey (
aggressive mimicry). Ants are dangerous, being rich in
distasteful and harmful compounds, which for other invertebrates makes them difficult prey, though ants are still widespread and plentiful, so members of several invertebrate taxa do feed on ants. Such ant predators include some spiders, such as species in the family
Salticidae (jumping spiders), spiders in the family
Oecobiidae and the family
Theridiidae. While exclusive myrmecophagy (only eating ants) is not very common, there are some striking examples, such as the Australian ant-slayer spider
Euryopis umbilicata that feeds almost exclusively on one species of ant. Their difficulty as prey promotes the prevalence of
ant mimicry for defence; these are
myrmecomorphs and
myrmecophiles. Myrmecomorph myrmecophages are
Batesian mimics, giving them protection against predators which avoid ants, and access to abundant food. Various
Hemipteran bugs, in the family
Reduviidae feed largely or exclusively on ants. Examples include the genera
Paredocla and
Acanthaspis. Some insects that feed on ants do so because they are
opportunistic predators of small insects that run on the ground surface, of which ants are a large proportion. Remarkable examples of convergent evolution are certain species of the
Neuropteran family
Myrmeleontidae, largely
Myrmeleon, the so-called ant lions, and the
Dipteran family
Vermileonidae, in particular the genera
Lampromyia and
Vermileo, the so-called worm lions. Both of them are regarded with interest for their habit of constructing conical
pit traps in fine sand or dust, at the bottom of which they await prey that has fallen in. Both throw sand to interfere with any attempts on the part of the prey to escape. Myrmecophagy takes more forms than just eating adult ants; in the butterfly family
Lycaenidae, during the later
instars of
caterpillar development, these larvae enter the nests of particular species of ants, eating the ants' eggs and larvae. Larvae of some species of flies, such as the genus
Microdon in the family
Syrphidae spend their entire immature lives in the nests of ants, feeding largely or entirely on the ant brood. Some
beetles specialise in feeding on the brood of particular species of ants. An example is the
coccinellid Diomus; larvae of
Diomus thoracicus in
French Guiana specialise in the nests of the invasive ant species
Wasmannia auropunctata. Major predators of ants include other ants, especially the
army ants and their close relatives. Some ants such as the raider ant
Ooceraea biroi and the new world army ant
Nomamyrmex esenbecki are obligate myrmecophages, that is they exclusively eat other ants, while the swarm-raiding
Eciton burchellii eat more or less all arthropods in their paths, including other ants (they are
generalists). == References ==