Sunday 19 May 2024

Zompopas: Costa Rica’s Leafcutter Ants

Paying the bills

Latest

“Rodrigo Chaves deserves a sniper,” lawyer states on social media

QCOSTARICA - On Friday, the government of Rodrigo Chaves...

Rains save the country from blackouts, ICE confirms by canceling rationing

QCOSTARICA -- On Friday, the Instituto Costarricense de Electricidad...

How to Choose an Online Casino: A Spotlight on Pokiesurf Casino

When it comes to online pokies, the digital highway...

Touchdown in Paradise! How to Secure Winning NFL Odds in Costa Rica Meta

Costa Rica beckons football fans! Jump into legal, lucrative...

College Basketball on the Beach: How to Win Big Betting in Costa Rica

Costa Rica has it all: beautiful beaches and exciting...

Government risked the Electrical System by forcing a campaign promise to lower rates

QCOSTARICA -- Costa Rica President Rodrigo Chaves, announced with...

NO electricity rationing for today and into the weekend

QCOSTARICA -- We won't be having any electricity rationing...

Dollar Exchange

¢505.39 BUY

¢512.59 SELL

18 May 2024 - At The Banks - Source: BCCR

Paying the bills

Share

QCOSTARICA – Leafcutter ants are ubiquitous in Costa Rica, except for the higher elevations. They are known commonly as zompopas.

Photo Jack Donnelly

In some countries they are called zompopos, the masculine version of the word. In fact, they are sterile females, so zompopa, the feminine form of the word is more accurate.

They are the reddish ants commonly seen carrying pieces of green leaf in long lines. It is also common to see them carrying bits of flowers or other plant material. The ants make easily recognizable trails from the plants they are attacking back to their nests.

- Advertisement -
Photo Jack Donnelly

Leafcutter ants are any of 47 species, belonging to two genera (a level of biological grouping between family and species). They range from the southern United States through all of Mexico and Central America and down into South America.

Many people think they carry the leaves back to the nest to eat. This is not true.

In fact, leafcutters were the world’s first farmers. They process the leaf matter and use it as a substrate to grow a fungus that feeds the colony.

After human beings, leafcutters comprise the largest and most complex societies on Earth. They are considered to be superorganisms—a coordinated group of individuals of the same species operating at a level that would be impossible without a division of labor. A large nest of zompopas can easily harbor millions of individuals.

Photo Jack Donnelly

It is estimated that leafcutters consume roughly 15% of all the leaf mass produced in Neotropical forests.

The next time you happen upon a leafcutter trail or nest, take a while to observe them.

- Advertisement -

They are interesting and industrious little creatures.

- Advertisement -
Paying the bills
Jack Donnelly
Jack Donnelly
Jack Donnelly is a writer, photographer, and speaker living in San Pablo de Heredia. His topics of interest include Costa Rican folk culture, national traditions, traditional cuisine, ecotourism, and wildlife. Donnelly is the author of COSTA RICA: Folk Culture, Traditions, and Cuisine which is available on Amazon in paperback and Kindle.

Related Articles

Subscribe to our stories

To be updated with all the latest news, offers and special announcements.

Discover more from Q COSTA RICA

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading