Malaysia

 New ant species discovered in Sabah named after UMS researcher

The species was identified during a 2023 fieldwork expedition at the Kawang Forest Reserve in Papar

Updated 1 year ago · Published on 23 Dec 2024 2:34PM

 New ant species discovered in Sabah named after UMS researcher
Dorsal view of the Queen of Syscia yekzoeae - December 23, 2024

by Jason Santos

A NEWLY discovered ant species from the genus Syscia has been named Syscia yekzoeae in honour of Dr. Yek Sze Huei, a senior lecturer at the Institute of Tropical Biology and Conservation (ITBC), Universiti Malaysia Sabah (UMS).

The species was identified during a 2023 fieldwork expedition at the Kawang Forest Reserve in Papar, Sabah. 

Lateral view of the Queen of S. yekzoeae

Colonies of Syscia yekzoeae inhabit rotting wood and soil. Notably, the species is an obligate predator of other ants, and its queens are flightless, possessing small, non-functioning wing buds whose purpose remains unknown.

The discovery, alongside two other ant species, Syscia sabahna and Ooceraea magna, has been published in the December 2024 issue of the journal Asian Myrmecology. Both additional species were found in Sabah’s Crocker Range.

Male of S. yekzoeae

Syscia sabahna is more widespread, with sightings in Poring, Tambuyukon in Kinabalu Park, and Tawau Hills Park. Like Syscia yekzoeae, it also resides in rotting wood and soil.

Dr. Yek and her team, who have continued ITBC’s long-standing focus on ant biodiversity since its founding in 1996, believe that Sabah’s ant diversity is far from fully understood.

They anticipate that ongoing research will lead to the discovery of even more new species.

 Worker of S. yekzoeae

The study was a collaborative effort involving taxonomic analysis by Professor Emeritus Seiki Yamane of Kagoshima University, Japan, and laboratory observations and specimen photography by researcher Riou Mizuno from the Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology, Japan.

The findings are detailed and can be viewed at http://www.asian-myrmecology.org/doi/10.20362/am.017004.html. - December, 23, 2024

Related News

Malaysia / 1mth

Tsunami alert: Stay calm and obey instructions from the authorities – Hajiji (video)

Malaysia / 1mth

Sabah embarks on five-year initiative to document multiethnic heritage - Hajiji

Malaysia / 1mth

Anwar - Sabah's special grant interim payment increased from RM600m to RM1.5b

Malaysia / 1mth

Anwar to clarify Sabah 40 pct entitlement talks tomorrow

Malaysia / 1mth

Sabah: GRS confident government will agree to review revenue entitlement rate 

Malaysia / 1mth

Main Sandakan-Lahad Datu road in Sukau collapses, thousands of users affected

Spotlight

Malaysia

“There are traitors among us waiting to topple Aminuddin” - Loke

World

Thailand pub fire death toll climbs to 32 as negligence probe intensifies

World

Cambodian casino tycoon's empire allegedly links to major cyber scam compound

Malaysia

Rumours rife over KJ contesting Negeri polls, possibly in Rembau

Malaysia

DAP Melaka moves into opposition benches after withdrawing from state government

Malaysia

Malaysia records 17.5 million international tourist arrivals from January - May

Malaysia

Cops probe viral incident of man being forced into Proton Waja

Malaysia

Pregnant woman accused of stealing: Lotus's apologises, takes disciplinary action

You may be interested

Malaysia

Pregnant woman accused of stealing: Lotus's apologises, takes disciplinary action

Malaysia

DAP Melaka moves into opposition benches after withdrawing from state government

Malaysia

Non-existent investment scams account for half of Malaysia’s RM5.37b online fraud losses

Malaysia

Melaka political crisis: 'No more room for negotiation' - Ab Rauf

Malaysia

KWAP fell victim to eFishery scam, invested nearly RM200 million - PM Anwar

Malaysia

The Network School in Malaysia’s Forest City: Innovation hub or security concern?

Malaysia

Muhyiddin trial: 'I was directed to prepare RM800k in cheques for Bersatu' - finance manager

Malaysia

Police detect shift in Rohingya entry routes as small boats target coastal areas