Monomorium floricola ( Jerdon, 1851 )

Sharaf, Mostafa R., Wetterer, James K., Mohamed, Amr A. & Aldawood, Abdulrahman S., 2022, Faunal composition, diversity, and distribution of ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) of Dhofar Governorate, Oman, with updated list of the Omani species and remarks on zoogeography, European Journal of Taxonomy 838 (1), pp. 1-106 : 64-66

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2022.838.1925

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:D495BCAE-9E03-4424-A01B-87F1CEB16B9C

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7094495

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/1461EC42-FFAF-FFF9-FDA6-00AD129FFE68

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Monomorium floricola ( Jerdon, 1851 )
status

 

Monomorium floricola ( Jerdon, 1851) View in CoL

Fig. 40 View Fig

Atta floricola Jerdon, 1851: 107 View in CoL View Cited Treatment (w) India. Indomalaya.

Diagnosis

An easily recognizable species by color with head and gaster uniformly dark brown or black, mesosoma, petiole, and postpetiole clear yellow; the petiolar node low and broadly conical, little higher than postpetiole in profile; body surface unsculptured and glossy.

Material examined

OMAN – Dhofar • 1 w; Ayn Dirbat ; 17.106° N, 54.453° E; alt. 207 m; 17 Nov. 2017; SF; M.R. Sharaf leg.; KSMA GoogleMaps .

Ecological and biological notes

Workers were collected foraging in leaf litter under a tree of Ziziphus sp. Although the gynes of M. floricola are wingless apparently affecting colony dispersal, the species has successfully spread into the tropics and subtropics ( Wetterer 2010b). This species can nest in tiny cavities in temperate regions where buildings, especially greenhouses, are heated. A ‘budding phenomenon’ is known for colonies of this species where large colonies divide into smaller colonies ( Snelling 2005; Wetterer 2010b). In addition, colonies are polygynous and polydomous. These biological and ecological characteristics have apparently allowed M. floricola to successfully colonize new habitats world-wide.

Geographic range

It was originally described from India, but now is a successful pantropical tramp species known from the Afrotropical ( Bolton 1987), the Malagasy ( Heterick 2006), the Nearctic ( Krombein et al. 1979), the Neotropical ( Kempf 1972), and the Polynesian ( Wilson & Taylor 1967) Regions. This species is a new record for Oman and the Arabian Peninsula.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

SubOrder

Apocrita

Family

Formicidae

Genus

Monomorium

Loc

Monomorium floricola ( Jerdon, 1851 )

Sharaf, Mostafa R., Wetterer, James K., Mohamed, Amr A. & Aldawood, Abdulrahman S. 2022
2022
Loc

Atta floricola

Jerdon T. C. 1851: 107
1851
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