Leighton Photography & Imaging

  • Home
  • Website
  • About
  • Portfolio
  • Contact
  • Newsletter
  • How to Download
  • Galleries
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x
search results
Image 14 of 20
Prev Next
Less

Desert Subterranean Termites

Add to Cart
twitterlinkedinfacebook

Quite a lucky find! While flipping over rocks searching for scorpions in northwestern Texas I chanced upon a (possibly brand new) desert subterranean termite colony. Normally found deep underground, under the rock I found the big queen termite, the king termite similar-looking but much smaller, and a number of worker termites. Hazarding a somewhat educated guess I'm going to say that these belong to the native Reticulitermes genus - a beneficial species that takes the role of fungus and algae in breaking down plant and wood material in the most arid of deserts where fungi and algae can't survive.

Copyright
©2015
Image Size
6000x4000 / 26.9MB
Keywords
Animalia, Arthropoda, Blattodea, Chihuahuan Desert, Culberson County, Dictyoptera, Guadalupe Mountains, Guadalupe Mountains National Park, Heterotermitinae, Insecta, Isoptera, Neoptera, Pterygota, Reticulitermes, Rhinotermitidae, Texas, animal, antennae, arthropod, biting, bug, colony, critter, desert, desert subterranean termites, fauna, insect, invertebrate, national park, native, natural, nature, queen, social, southwest, spring, structure, subterranean, system, termite, termites, terrestrial, underground, white, wild, wildlife, wood, worker, workers
Contained in galleries
Insects
Quite a lucky find! While flipping over rocks searching for scorpions in northwestern Texas I chanced upon a (possibly brand new) desert subterranean termite colony. Normally found deep underground, under the rock I found the big queen termite, the king termite similar-looking but much smaller, and a number of worker termites. Hazarding a somewhat educated guess I'm going to say that these belong to the native Reticulitermes genus - a beneficial species that takes the role of fungus and algae in breaking down plant and wood material in the most arid of deserts where fungi and algae can't survive.