Male ants are specialized for mating and dispersal and often appear vastly different from their sisters. The little winged insect at center is a  male Odontomachus sp. trap-jaw ant; the rest are female workers.

Cambodia (Laboratory colony at the University of Illinois)
Nestmate transport: a worker trap-jaw ant (Odontomachus sp.) carries a male.

Cambodia (laboratory colony at the University of Illinois)
Odontomachus sp. trap-jaw ant.

Cambodia (Laboratory colony at the University of Illinois)
Male ants often look little like their sisters. This is an Odontomachus sp. trap-jaw ant.

Cambodia (Laboratory colony at the University of Illinois)
Odontomachus erythrocephalus

Icononzo, Tolima, Colombia
Assassin bugs are sit-and-wait predators.  This Zelus tetracanthus arrived at a blacklight insect trap and intercepted incoming prey, in this case a male trap-jaw ant.  

Tucson, Arizona, USA.
Paratrechina longicornis crazy ants scavenging a trap-jaw ant carcass.  Paratrechina group-transport their food, a rapid method, allowing them to secure resources before slower but more aggressive competing species.

Archbold Biological Station, Florida, USA
Odontomachus clarus, the desert trap-jaw ant.

Portal, Arizona, USA
Odontomachus cephalotes

Cape York Peninsula, Queensland, Australia
Odontomachus clarus, the desert trap-jaw ant.

Portal, Arizona, USA
Odontomachus clarus, the desert trap-jaw ant.

Portal, Arizona, USA
Odontomachus clarus, the desert trap-jaw ant.

Portal, Arizona, USA
See photo in original gallery.
all images and text © Alex Wild 2001-2013