Most Pselaphinae are
free-living predators as
adults and larvae,
feeding on springtails,
mites, and other small
invertebrates. A large
number of genera have
become associated to some
degree with ants, and the
subfamily shows a whole range
of ant-associations, from scavengers
in the vicinity of ant nests, to true
inquiline species that live in the nest and are
carried and fed by their ant hosts. Some of the
most highly adapted ant inquilines are in the tribe
Clavigerini, which have lost their eyes; they have
shortened and strengthened antennae and
abdominal segments to reduce damage caused
by the ants, and have trichomes, special brushlike
structures that secrete liquids on which ants and
their larvae can feed.
is a pselaphine, the 52 million-year-old
Eocene Protoclaviger trichodens, which
was described by one of the scientists who
discovered it as “a truly transitional fossil”
opposite | Batrisodes
lineaticollis A free-living
North American pselaphine,
photographed in the Great
Smoky Mountains National
Park, North Carolina.
above | Claviger testaceus
From northern Europe,
a highly modified eyeless
pselaphine, associated with
ants of the genus Lasius.
below | Colilodion schulzi
The only known specimen of
this extraordinary species from
the Philippines, named by
Chinese and Swiss scientists.