42
Specialized habitats
live in the soil or in arboreal nests made from
a lightweight substance called “carton.”
Termite colonies have been called the world’s
oldest societies, with the earliest fossil termites
known from the beginning of the Cretaceous
period. Evidence suggests that the group is
even older; one piece of evidence for the early
appearance of termites is a Late Jurassic fossil
mammal Fruitafossor windscheffeli, described
in 2005 in North America, which has been
interpreted as a specialist termite predator from
its tubular teeth and digging limbs, resembling
modern termite eaters.
Termites were for a long time placed in their
own order of insects, Isoptera, but recent research
combining DNA, fossil, and morphological
evidence has shown that they are eusocial relatives
of cockroaches (Blattodea). Despite similarities
in nest and social structure, they are not closely
related to ants. However, like ants they are divided
into castes, with the majority of the colony being
nonreproductive workers, which maintain the
structure of the colony and collect food, or
soldiers, which defend it, using large jaws or
chemical defenses. The similarity has led to
termites being called “white ants” in many parts
of the world.
Also like ants, the colonies of termites provide
abundant opportunities for nest invaders
(called inquilines) to occupy their living
space, taking advantage of the constant
temperature and humidity, protection
from predators, or the reliable supply of
food (whether the food of the termites or
the termites themselves). Many beetles
TERMITE NESTS AND COLONIES
Tall edifices, seemingly built of stone, are
characteristic features of the dry grasslands of
the African savanna, the Brazilian Cerrado, and
the Australian outback. These are the colonies of
termites, each one built and maintained over
decades or centuries, and home to thousands or
even millions of termite workers. The structures
cover extensive subterranean networks of
chambers and tunnels. The mounds are built
from soil cemented with the saliva and dung of
the termites, and are surprisingly strong and
weatherproof, although they need regular
maintenance by the workers.
Termites are social insects, living in colonies
controlled by a reproductive pair, called the
“queen” and the “king.” The white, sausage-like
queens grow huge and are some of the longest
lived of insects, typically exceeding ten years and
reported at up to fifty. When the queen dies, the
supply of a hormone she produces inhibiting
reproductive development in the colony stops,
and another queen arises and produces the same
hormone to inhibit the rest of the colony. Not all
termite genera inhabit giant fortified nests; many
left | Termitotrox cupido (Scarabaeidae) This
blind, flightless scarab beetle was discovered
in 2012 in termite nests in Cambodia and
named after a Roman god of love.