Trinervitermes trinervoides

Trinervitermes trinervoides
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Isoptera
Family: Termitidae
Genus: Trinervitermes
Species: T. trinervoides
Binomial name
Trinervitermes trinervoides
(Sjöstedt, 1911)

Trinervitermes trinervoides is a species of termite from family Termitidae from Africa.

It has a snout on its head and thus called the snouted termite. The snouted harvester termite (Trinervitermes trinervoides) is a mostly nocturnal species local to South Africa.[1] It is widely distributed and common south of the Limpopo River. The species lives in savannah-grassland areas. The species stores grass within its mounds, just beneath the surface. Evidence showed that it is likely that the species is not polycalic and thus each mound will house only a single colony.[2] The mounding building causes disturbances that build nutritional value as well as improving drainage and fertility. All of these improve vegetation and thus herbivore concentration in an area. Oftentimes these disturbances can be strong enough to switch the ecosystem from a grassy vegetated area to a tree, shrub, and pioneer species landscape.[3]

Range

The species relies on grassy habitats within southern Africa. It does not travel outside of South Africa, but there are related species in nearby areas. The termite also relies on Savannah grasses for its survival and thus avoids barren land.

Foraging Behavior

It forages with groups of 3-5 individual wide columns moving from the foraging holes some distance from the main mound and radiating out towards grasses. The species forages during the night and avoids foraging during the summer months of June–August. The foraging itself could last anywhere from 2 hours to 6.5 hours.[2] It feeds as harvester termite. It forages at night.[2] The species forages on the surface completely exposed unlike most similar species of termite. This species is able to manage this by secreting a chemical containing a mixture of diterpenes and monoterpenes. This chemical defense can cause significant internal damage to predators and works to deter the large majority of predators. One of their main predators is aardwolves, which are able to eat up to 300,000 termites a night while seeming unperturbed by this toxin.[4]

Effect on the land

Studies have shown that the composition and abundance of plant life on and around a Trinervitermes trinervoides mound vary depending on the mound age. Active mounds support the growth of both a climax and a pioneer grass in the immediate area, while an eroded mound supports subclimax grass and shrubs. It is shown that soils that contain eroded mounds have higher nutrient contents than soils as close as 0.5 meters away.[3] The species has developed a method of foraging and storing the grass it collects up near the surface of the mounds. Because they rely on open cover foraging, winter is unavailable and unlike most species of termite they store up their food to avoid leaving the mound when the cold makes this difficult. Soldiers are also used to defend the foragers while the food is collected, having them patrol between the foraging holes and the foraging area continuously.[2]

References

  1. K. E. Holekamp (2007). “Aardwolf: Diet and Foraging”. Hyaena Specialist Group. http://www.hyaenidae.org/the-hyaenidae/aardwolf-proteles-cristatus/cristatus-diet-and-foraging.html
  2. 1 2 3 4 R. A. Adam, J. D. Mitchell & M. C. van der Westhuizen (2008). "Aspects of foraging in the harvester termite, Trinervitermes trinervoides (Sjöstedt) (Termitidae: Nasutitermitinae)". African Entomology. 16 (2): 153–161. doi:10.4001/1021-3589-16.2.153.
  3. 1 2 F. R. Smith, R. I. Yeaton (1998). “Disturbance by the mound-building termite, Trinervitermes trinervoides, and vegetation patch dynamics in a semi-arid, southern African grassland”. Plant Ecology 137 (1): 44-53.
  4. P. R. K. Richardson, C. D. Levitan (1994). “Tolerance of Aardwolves to Defense Secretions of Trinervitermes trinervoides”. Journal of Mammalogy 75 (1): 84-91. doi: 10.2307/1382238
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