Papyrius nitidus (Shining Coconut Ant)

The Shining Coconut Ant is essential to the survival of the nationally rare Small Ant-blue Butterfly, with the butterfly spending its larvae and pupae stages within the ant's nest. The Small Ant-blue is only known from a few locations both in the ACT and nationally, while the Shining Coconut Ant seems quite widespread in the Canberra area. The nests of the Shining Coconut Ant are very distinctive and it is hopped that by mapping the distribution of the ant we may find more breeding colonies of the butterfly. A similar species, the Hairy Coconut Ant also occurs in the ACT and region.

The Coconut Ant build nests in the ground and in dead wood on or near the surface. The nests are readily identified because the ant build a cover of vegetatable and soil matter, with a carboard like consistency, over nests, forage ways, at the base of eucalypt salpings and along tree stems. The material is most obvious on top of cut stumps and in the cracks of fallen timber (see photos).

The clinching test as to whether it is a Coconut Ant nest is to squash one of the few mm long ants and a very strong coconut oil smell should be immediately obvious.

The Coconut Ant feeds on the excretions of leafhoppers and scale incsects, that are feeding on eucalypts and wattles so nests tend to be in areas with much sapling growth. Work in Victoria also suggests that nests are most likely to be found on flatter well drained areas where projected foliage cover is less than 25% and fallen timber and dead wood is present.

Happy ant hunting. Please report any nest to Canberra Nature MAp

Papyrius nitidus is listed in the following regions:

Canberra & Southern Tablelands

Page 1 of 6 - image sightings only

1  2  3  4  5  6 

Coconut Ants are only a few mm long
Twiggy + chewed Cardboard like covering
Material found in timber cracks

Species information

Follow Papyrius nitidus

Receive alerts of new sightings

Subscribe
2,155,177 sightings of 19,962 species in 6,510 locations from 11,503 contributors
CCA 3.0 | privacy
We acknowledge the Traditional Owners of this land and acknowledge their continuing connection to their culture. We pay our respects to their Elders past and present.