
Dinomyrmex gigas - Major Worker (mandibles)
Note: purchased specimen.
Here's a series of images documenting Dinomyrmex gigas, one of the largest ants in the world. This species is nocturnal, therefore only incidentally spotted by day.
This is a Major worker, sometimes just called "Major". Majors are sterile females tasked primarily as body guard for the rest of the colony when they go out at night to forage. Majors are significantly larger than minor workers, and have a heart-shaped massive head and giant mandables. They are described to grow to 28mm, whilst this one was even larger, at exactly 30mm.
These female soldiers alternate between deadly force and ritualistic violence. When defending against other species, it's total war leading to regular death. No time is wasted on mourning as a subsitute troup of Major follows.
However, when a Major meets another Major of the same species from a rival colony, something fascinating happens. They engage in ritual fights. They drum their feet in anticipation. As soon as one touches the other, it's game on, like boxers hitting first gloves. A ritual of intimidation follows, where antennae vibrate, mandibles are raised, and rapid front legs peddle like in a kangaroo fight.
The indivual to sustain the longest, wins. Yet only this round. The loser retreats to recover, clean and recharge. And then will return to the same tournament spot for another go at it. The animals will keep doing this for up to one month, probably because one realizes a lack of an end game.

''Dinomyrmex'' is a monotypic genus of ant containing the species ''Dinomyrmex gigas'' or giant forest ant. ''D. gigas'' is a large species of ant, native to Southeast Asian forests. It is one of the largest ants in existence, measuring in at 20.9 mm for normal workers, and 28.1 mm for the soldiers.
comments (9)
Having a practice with a new lighting approach using LEDs instead of flash. Posted 4 years ago
Are we talking live or dead subjects in your case? Which magnification and aperture? Posted 4 years ago
But at f13.6 and high shutter speed I need to flash the living daylights out of everything (well actually the "shutter speed" is determined by the duration of the flash) so I'm doubtful that I get enough light with maybe 4-5x 5-10W COBs but it's worth a try anyway - it makes for much more flexible lighting adjustment than my usual yoguhrt soft boxes ;o) Posted 4 years ago
I recently read that any reasonable speedlight delivers *hundreds of thousands* of lumen of light output. Some of them, and we're still talking consumer speedlights, deliver over 1 million lumen. During a very short duration, of course.
By comparison, the LED I have now, is considered fairly powerful. Not top of line, but pretty strong. It outputs 1200 lumen.
So that's not even in the same ballpark, league or universe. I'm not sure what your collection of 10W lights would produce though, and there's always ISO to play with.
Worth a try for sure! Posted 4 years ago