Desert Termite vs Lamani Spiral-nest Termite
Side-by-side species comparison
| Attribute | Desert Termite | Lamani Spiral-nest Termite |
|---|---|---|
| Scientific Name | Gnathamitermes tubiformans | Apicotermes lamani |
| Order | Blattodea | Blattodea |
| Family | Termitidae | Termitidae |
| Size | 4-7 mm | 3-5 mm |
| Habitat | Deserts & Drylands | Forests |
| Diet | Dung Feeders | Omnivores |
| Regions | North America | Central Africa |
| Conservation | Least Concern | Least Concern |
Desert Termite
A subterranean termite that builds mud tubes over dead grass and cow dung in desert environments. It plays a critical role in nutrient cycling in arid ecosystems.
Did You Know?
Its mud tubes, called galleries, can cover entire dead grass plants overnight after a desert rainstorm.
Lamani Spiral-nest Termite
A subterranean soil-feeding termite known for its remarkably structured underground nests in Central African forests. The nests contain multiple levels connected by helical ramps. Colonies are small to moderate in size with highly specialized worker castes.
Did You Know?
When cross-sectioned, the nest reveals a honeycomb-like pattern of chambers connected by perfectly proportioned spiral corridors, built entirely by blind workers.