Tetramorium transformans Santschi, 1914

Sharaf, Mostafa R., Fisher, Brian L., Collingwood, Cedric A. & Aldawood, Abdulrahman S., 2017, Ant fauna (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) of the Socotra Archipelago (Yemen): zoogeography, distribution and description of a new species, Journal of Natural History (J. Nat. Hist.) 51 (5 - 6), pp. 317-378 : 361-363

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222933.2016.1271157

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:89612083-9CE6-48E8-8975-1CE5334E098B

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5192407

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039DB655-163B-FFD6-B427-E3A968C9CCA3

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Tetramorium transformans Santschi, 1914
status

stat. rev., stat. nov.

Tetramorium transformans Santschi, 1914 , stat. rev., stat. nov.

( Figure 24 View Figure 24 (a–c))

Tetramorium pauper st. transformans Santschi, 1914: 104 View Cited Treatment (w.) Kenya. Afrotropical. Junior synonym of Tetramorium caldarium View in CoL : Bolton, 1980: 310. (Holotype worker, NHMB) [examined].

Diagnosis

Worker. Eyes of eight ommatidia in longest row; frontal carinae running back beyond posterior level of eyes; head and gaster yellowish, first gastral tergite darker than gaster, mesosoma, petiole and postpetiole reddish distinctly contrasting rest of body.

Material examined

Yemen, Socotra Island, W. Sakhalof , 27 April 2014, 48 m, (M. R. Sharaf leg.), 12.63311°N, 54.05632°E (1 w, KSMA); GoogleMaps Yemen, Socotra Island, Qalansyia, 25 April 2014, 26 m, (M. R. Sharaf leg.), 12.68401°N, 53.49052°E (2 w, KSMA); GoogleMaps Yemen, Socotra Island, Dixam (W. Zereg), 24 April 2014, 279 m, (M. R. Sharaf leg.), 12.46868°N, 54.01091°E (3 KSMA); GoogleMaps Yemen, Socotra Island, W. Ayhift , 20 April 2014, 38 m, (M. R. Sharaf leg.), 12.61906°N, 53.94005°E (12 w, KSMA); GoogleMaps Yemen, Socotra Island, W. Jo’ o, 21 April 2014, 196 m, (M. R. Sharaf leg.), 12.54038°N, 54.17186°E, (10 w KSMA); GoogleMaps Yemen, Socotra Island, Deyishil village , 21 April 2014, 180 m, (M. R. Sharaf leg.), 12.52010°N, 54.17438°E (1 w, KSMA) GoogleMaps .

Remarks

Bolton (1980) synonymized Tetramorium transformans under Tetramorium caldarium . However, Tetramorium transformans can be readily separated from Tetramorium caldarium by the following characters: cephalic dorsum with scattered longitudinal feeble rugulae, with ground-sculpture shining and weakly imbricate. Frontal carinae less-developed, ending back at the posterior levels of eyes. Whereas Tetramorium caldarium has the cephalic dorsum feebly densely finely longitudinally rugulose, with ground-sculpture dull, finely, conspicuously punctulate or granulate. Frontal carinae well-developed running back beyond the posterior levels of eyes, feebly defined, and interrupted before reaching posterior margin of head.

Tetramorium transformans was originally described as a strain under Tetramorium pauper Forel, 1907 . Comparing Tetramorium transformans with Tetramorium pauper , both are similar in body size, sculpture and pilosity, but Tetramorium transformans is easily diagnosed by the larger eyes, with seven ommatidia in the longest row (EI 26), whereas eyes of Tetramorium pauper are consistently smaller, with four ommatidia in the longest row (EI 15). In addition, the frontal carinae in Tetramorium pauper are shorter and just reach back to midline of eyes, whereas Tetramorium transformans has a longer and stronger frontal carinae running back to the posterior level of eyes. The eyes structure and size are important diagnostic characters in the genus Tetramorium (Francisco Hita Garcia & Barry Bolton, personal communication 2016), Therefore, Tetramorium transformans is removed from synonymy with Tetramorium caldarium and recognized as a valid species.

Geographic range

This species is originally described from Kenya ( Santschi 1914) and is recorded for the first time from Socotra Archipelago.

Ecological and biological notes

This species was collected from dry leaf litter under a tree of Ficus cordata Thunb (Moraceae) . Several workers were foraging in dry soil under a date palm tree. A nest was found in moist leaf litter rich in decaying organic materials of animal faeces and next to a stream near date palm trees. A nest was found in galleries of a termite nest under a rock and coexisting with a nest of Monomorium exiguum .

R

Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Formicidae

SubFamily

Myrmicinae

Genus

Tetramorium

Loc

Tetramorium transformans Santschi, 1914

Sharaf, Mostafa R., Fisher, Brian L., Collingwood, Cedric A. & Aldawood, Abdulrahman S. 2017
2017
Loc

Tetramorium pauper st. transformans

Bolton B 1980: 310
Santschi F 1914: 104
1914
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