Solenopsis picea is most abundant in second growth forest or other altered habitats where there are trees, but it also occurs with some frequency in mature forest. It is arboreal, nesting in dead sticks, under epiphytes, and opportunistically in any arboreal cavity. Colonies are enormous, polydomous, and abundantly polygynous. They are spread throughout the vegetation and it is difficult to delimit colony boundaries. I have found dead sticks packed with abundant queens, some alate and some dealate, suggesting adoption of daughter queens into the colony.
In several ways workers are intermediate between fire ants and the tiny diplorhoptrum of leaf litter and soil. They are somewhat polymorphic, with considerable variation in worker size, but no really large soldiers. They are intermediate in size, with the smallest workers difficult to distinguish from small black diplorhoptrum of the leaf litter. They have small compound eyes, composed of five or more ommatidia. Diplorhoptrum usually have fewer, and fire ants usually have more.
Workers are omnivorous foragers, harvesting dead arthropods and recruiting to baits. Workers extend their foraging onto the ground and into the leaf litter, because they often occur in Winkler samples of sifted litter.
At La Selva Biological Station, S. picea is very common in the lab clearing. Masses of these tiny black ants are perennially found on the blacklight sheet, recruiting to dead insects that accumulate there.
Taxonomic history
Wheeler & Wheeler, 1955c PDF: 135 (l.); Pacheco & Mackay, 2013 PDF: 263 (w.q.m.).Subspecies of Solenopsis tenuis: Forel, 1912h PDF: 8.Revived status as species: Mann, 1922 PDF: 30.Senior synonym of Solenopsis picea reducta, Solenopsis picea subadpressa, Solenopsis angulata nigelloides, Solenopsis parabiotica, and material of unavailable Solenopsis angulata carettei ardua referred here: Pacheco & Mackay, 2013 PDF: 263.