The longhorn crazy ant , also known as the black crazy ant, is a species of small Formicine ant. These ants are commonly called "crazy ants" because instead of following straight lines, they dash around erratically. They have a broad distribution, including much of the tropics and subtropics, and are also found in buildings in more temperate regions, making them one of the most widespread ant species in the world. This species, as well as all others in the ant subfamily Formicinae, cannot sting. However, this species can fire/shoot a formic acid spray from its abdomen when under attack by other insects or attacking other insects. When the longhorn crazy ant bends its abdomen while aiming at an enemy insect, it is typically shooting its hard-to-see acid. These ants can be touched safely, similar to the ghost ants.

Host Genome

No genome information available

Related Symbionts

1 records

Symbiont records associated with Paratrechina longicornis

Classification Function Function Tags Reference
Wolbachia

Pseudomonadota

Bacteria

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Metagenome Information

0 records

Metagenome sequencing data associated with Paratrechina longicornis

Run Platform Location Date BioProject

No metagenomes found

No metagenome records associated with this host species.

Amplicon Information

0 records

Amplicon sequencing data associated with Paratrechina longicornis

Run Classification Platform Location Environment

No amplicons found

No amplicon records associated with this host species.

Related Articles

1 records

Research articles related to Paratrechina longicornis

Title Authors Journal Year DOI
Tseng, SP; Wetterer, JK; Suarez, AV ... Shoemaker, D; Yang, CCS
FRONTIERS IN GENETICS
2019
10.3389/fgene.2019.00838