Microhodotermes viator, commonly called the southern harvester termite,[2] the Karoo harvesting termite,[3] the wood-eating harvester termite,[4]houtkapper (lit.'wood cutter'), and stokkiesdraer (lit.'stick carrier'),[5] is a species of harvester termite native to the desert shrubland of Namibia and South Africa. The eusocial insects inhabit soil mounds called heuweltjies. In 2024, researchers found inhabited Microhodotermes viator mounds up to 34,000 years old—by far the oldest active termite structures ever dated.[6]
^Suttie, J. M.; Reynolds, Stephen G.; Batello, Caterina; Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, eds. (2005). Grasslands of the world. Plant production and protection series. Rome: Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations. p. 98. ISBN978-92-5-105337-9. OCLC61697614.
^Annecke, David P.; Moran, V. Cliff (1982). Insects and mites of cultivated plants in South Africa. Durban Woburn, Mass: Butterworths. ISBN978-0-409-08398-9.