Carebara osborni Wheeler
queen -
Type location Zaïre (Wheeler, 1922: 174, illustrated, all
forms); all forms known (see Bolton, 1995)
.
Wheeler's (1922) illustration of the worker, male and queen is at
.
Described by Wheeler (edited for modern terminology)
WORKER -
length 0.8 to 1 mm. Head subrectangular, slightly longer than
broad, as broad in front as behind, with nearly straight posterior and
very feebly and evenly rounded lateral borders. Eyes absent. Mandibles
convex, with oblique 4-toothcd apical borders. Antenna 9-jointed, the
scapes reaching to the middle of the sides of the head; funiculus
joints 2 to 6 very small, slightly broader than long (too long in the
figure), terminal joint longer than the remainder of the funiculus
(too short in the figure). Alitrunk narrower than the head; pro- and
mesonotum flattened above, suboctagonal, a little longer than broad;
propodeum subcuboidal, of the same height as the promesonotum but
narrower, as long as broad, the base and declivity subequal in
profile, meeting at a right angle, the base not marginate on the
sides, the declivity in the middle sloping and longer than the base.
Metanotal suture very distinct but not impressed. Petiole node as long
as broad, subglobular, pedicel short; postpetiole not broader than the
petiole, with much smaller node. Gaster and legs of the usual shape.
Shining; mandibles finely and sparsely punctate; head and Alitrunk
above coarsely punctate, the latter more sparsely; punctures on the
remainder of the body finer and sparser. Hairs pale yellow, short,
subappressed, not very abundant, most distinct on the gaster. Pale
brownish yellow, mandibular teeth and anterior border of clypeus
darker brown.
FEMALE (dealated) - length 8 mm. Head, including the
mandibles, as long as broad, broader behind than in front, with feebly
convex posterior border, rounded posterior corners and straight
cheeks. Eyes not very convex, on the sides of the head. Ocelli large,
in deep impressions. Mandibles large, with oblique, 4-toothed apical
borders. Clypeus with a broad longitudinal median impression, its
anterior border broadly and sinuately emarginate in the middle.
Frontal area absent, represented only by the impressed anterior end of
the rather deep frontal groove. Frontal carina slightly flattened,
scarcely diverging behind. Antennae short, 10-jointed, scapes reaching
to the posterior orbits; funiculus joints 2 to 5 broader than long;
joint 6 as long as broad, joint 7 somewhat more than half as long as
joint 8, the terminal joint equal to joints 7 and 8 together. Alitrunk
robust, longer than broad, broader than the head; the mesonotum
convex, longer than broad, in front scarcely overarching the vertical
pronotum, parapsidal furrows very distinct. Propodeum longitudinally
grooved in the middle, with short base and a much longer, abrupt,
rather flat declivity, bordered on each side by a large, flat, rounded
and marginate lobe or crest. Petiole node from above broadly oval,
nearly as long as broad, evenly convex and rounded above, its anterior
slope with a median blunt convexity, its ventral border in profile
slightly concave in the middle. Postpetiole from above a little
broader than the petiole, about one and two-thirds times as broad as
long, convex above in front. Gaster broadly elliptical, somewhat
flattened dorsally and ventrally. Legs rather short.
Shining; mandibles, head, propodeum, and sides and ventral portions
of petiole and postpetiole more opaque. Mandibles very coarsely
striatopunctate. Clypeus irregularly and indistinctly rugulose,
somewhat transversely in the middle. Head coarsely and umbilicately
punctate, finely striate in the spaces between the punctures.
Mesonotum, scutellum, mesopleurae, gaster and nodes of petiole and
postpetiole covered with umbilicate punctures of the same size as
those on the head but sparser and with the shining interspaces very
minutely and sparsely punctate. Opaque portions of propodeum and
pedicel very finely striate. Legs with larger and minute punctures
like the gaster, but the larger punctures are smaller and denser.
Antennal scapes finely and densely punctate. Hairs yellow, short,
bristly, suberect, rather uniformly distributed over the body, arising
from the large umbilicate punctures, longer on the gula and tip of the
gaster, more abundant on the latter; very short, delicate and
appressed on the legs and scapes. Reddish brown; gaster and legs
somewhat paler; mesonotum with indistinct traces of castaneous
stripes, especially posteriorly. Mandibular teeth blackish.
MALE - length 7 to 7.5 mm. Head through the eyes much
broader than long, broadest at the median transverse diameter, short
and rounded behind. Eyes very large; ocelli large and prominent.
Mandibles narrow, 3-toothed. Clypeus very convex and rounded in the
middle with projecting, entire anterior border. Antennae 13-jointed,
long, filiform, of uniform thickness; scapes about three times as long
as the first funicular joint, which is as broad as long but not
swollen; remaining joints cylindrical, fully three times as long as
broad, the terminal joint longer. Alitrunk robust, nearly as broad as
long, through the wing insertions slightly broader than the head,
convex above, in front somewhat overarching the pronotum. Propodeum
short, shaped like that of the female, but without the marginate
projections on the sides. Petiole resembling that of the female but
with node scarcely developed; postpetiole much less convex, longer in
proportion to its length. Gaster rather slender, scarcely flattened
above; external genitalia voluminous, more or less exserted, the outer
valves large, rounded at their tips. Legs slender.
Subopaque; scutellum, gaster, and upper surfaces of petiolar and
postpetiolar nodes shining. Mandibles, head, thorax, and pedicel very
finely and densely punctate; gaster also with fine but sparser
punctures, those on the scutellum coarser but not so dense as on the
remainder of the thorax. Hairs finer, much shorter, and denser and
more appressed on all parts of the body than in the female. Brown;
ocellar region black. Wings brownish, rather opaque, with the veins
and pterostigma of the same color as the body.
Type Location - Described from four workers, one female, and
numerous males taken from a single colony at Niangara (Lang and
Chapin) in the mound of a termite (Termes natalensis
Haviland). According to Mr. Lang, the specimens were found "south
of Niangara in one of the grass-covered termite hills which give the
treeless landscape of the savannah its characteristic appearance
(Plate XV, see left and "click"). These hills extend as far
as the eye can reach. They are never very high rarely more than twelve
feet though they may attain a diameter of fifty feet at the base.
Usually they appear as mere undulations of the ground, covered with
grass which may be as much as ten feet high. The Carebara
queen, males and workers were living in a flattened chamber about
three feet above the general level of the soil near the center of a
medium-sized termitarium." C. osborni, though a true Carebara,
is entirely unlike any of the known species in the small size of all
the phases. In this respect and in the color of the male and female it
approaches the species of the genus Oligomyrmex. |