Oligomyrmex (Aeromyrma) petulcus (Wheeler)
Major -
Type location Zaïre (Aëromyrma petulca,
Wheeler, 1922: , illustrated; see Bolton, 1995) from Malela,
collector Lang & Chapin; major only described. Known from a
single specimen .
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Wheeler's
(1922) description is -
MAJOR - Length 2.5 mm. Head suboblong, nearly one and
one-half times as long as broad, with feebly convex sides and
rather deeply and angularly excised posterior border. Anterior
ocellus well developed; eyes very small, consisting of about six
ommatidia, situated at the anterior third of the head. Posterior
corners of the latter with a low but distinct ridge produced on
each side into a minute tooth. Mandibles convex, with 4 small,
subequal, rather acute apical teeth, and a large blunt and
flattened basal tooth. Clypeus flat, ecarinate, its anterior
border feebly and sinuately excised in the middle, its posterior
portion narrow, rectangular, extending back between the diverging
frontal carinae. Frontal groove distinct. Antennae 10-jointed;
scapes rather slender and curved at the base, reaching to the
middle of the sides of the head; joints 2 to 7 of the funiculus
minute, subequal, nearly as broad as long (somewhat too long in
the figure); club a little shorter than the remainder of the
funiculus, with the basal joint longer than broad and about
one-third as long as the terminal joint. Thorax decidedly shorter
and narrower than the head; pro- and mesonotum convex, steep in
front, rounded above; promesonotal suture distinct; mesonotum
subcircular; metanotal sclerite distinct. In profile the dorsal
outline of the mesonotum slopes backward continuously with the
base of the propodeum without a distinct impression at the
metnotal groove. Propodeum with a small tooth on each side, its
declivity longer than its base, rather steeply sloping. Petiolar
node compressed anteroposteriorly, in profile with a rather
angular summit, from above transverse; postpetiole transversely
elliptical and somewhat broader than the petiole, with a blunt
ventral tooth. Gaster voluminous, distended with a transparent
liquid, elongate elliptical, longer than the remainder of the
body, its anterior border straight in the middle. Legs short.
Subopaque; mandibles, posterior portion of clypeus, frontal area,
mesonotum, and gaster shining; mandibles sparsely and indistinctly
punctate; head finely and regularly longitudinally rugulose;
sparsely and rather coarsely punctate posteriorly; gaster with
fine, scattered, piligerous punctures. Hairs yellowish, moderately
abundant, suberect, of uneven length, most conspicuous on the
dorsal surface; very short, dense and appressed on the appendages.
Ferruginous red; legs and antennae paler and more yellowish;
gaster dark brown above, with the venter and bases and apical
borders of the segments broadly yellowish.
Described from a single specimen taken by Lang and Chapin at
Malela "from a small mushroom-shaped termitarium,"
probably belonging to a colony of Eutermes fungifaber Sjöstedt.
A. petulca differs from africanus Forel from
the Kalahari [Botswana] in its slightly smaller size, darker
color, in having the postpetiole only slightly broader than the
petiole (nearly twice as broad in africanus), in
possessing propodeal teeth and longitudinal rugae on the head.
In africanus, the head is finely reticulate and the
remainder of the body is evidently more shining than in petulcus.
In nossindambo [from Magagascar] the head is broader and
less sharply rugulose, the thorax is more deeply impressed at
the metanotal groove suture, the antennal scapes are much
shorter, the anterior ocellus is smaller and the color is paler.
Forel states that the gaster of the africanus soldier
is "transparent yellow," which indicates that it was
full of a clear liquid as in petulcus. This condition is
seen also in the soldiers of many species of Pheidole in
Australia and in our Southern States and seems to indicate that
this caste in the two genera mentioned often functions as
replete or food- storage individuals as in the honey ants (Myrmecocystus,
Leptomyrmex, Melophorus, Plagiolepis,
and Prenolepis).
The photomontage is collated from the AMNH Congo Expedition
website. The photographs of the holotype specimen (labelled as
Aeromyrma petulca) were taken by Brian Fisher as part of
the VCA project at the California Academy of Sciences -
http://www.antweb.org/specimen.do?name=casent0003148. |
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