Crematogaster Lund, 1831

Hosoishi, Shingo & Ogata, Kazuo, 2017, Phylogenetic analysis and systematic position of two new species of the ant genus Crematogaster (Hymenoptera, Formicidae) from Southeast Asia, European Journal of Taxonomy 370, pp. 1-17 : 5-6

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2017.370

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:1163140F-FC96-4B65-A03A-37E9BE9D9218

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3852182

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/99519B48-5653-1100-FD96-F8EAFADBF860

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Crematogaster Lund, 1831
status

 

Genus Crematogaster Lund, 1831 View in CoL

Phylogenetic position and divergence time estimation

The five nuclear gene sequences consisted of 2301 bp and contained 652 variable characters (VC) and 420 parsimony informative characters (PIC) ( Table 2 View Table 2 ). The MP and ML analyses resulted in similar topologies for the position of C. khmerensis sp. nov., but the BI analysis differed in topology from the MP and ML analyses. As our results from the BI analysis had similar results to the tree inferred by Blaimer (2012c), we use the BI tree to illustrate all our results ( Fig. 1 View Fig ).

In MP analysis, the concatenated five-gene dataset yielded 1800 equally parsimonious trees (length = 1407, consistency index = 0.48, retention index = 0.77), of which the strict consensus tree is well resolved. The MP analysis recovered that C. khmerensis sp. nov. was nested within node A with high bootstrap support (100%) ( Fig. 2 View Fig ). Further splitting of the node resulted in a trichotomy having branches with C. khmerensis sp. nov., C. borneensis -group and node C.

The ML analysis recovered that C. khmerensis sp. nov. was nested within node A with high bootstrap support (100%) ( Fig. 2 View Fig ). Similarly the node displayed a trichotomy among C. khmerensis sp. nov., C. borneensis -group and node C.

The BI recovered that C. khmerensis sp. nov. was nested within node A ( Fig. 2 View Fig ). Despite the relatively low level of support (0.88 posterior probability), C. khmerensis sp. nov. at node B was a sister to node C ( Fig. 2 View Fig ).

Estimations of divergence time showed that the common ancestor of C. khmerensis sp. nov. and clade C began to diverge approximately 15 million years ago ( Fig. 3 View Fig ).

Diagnosis of the Crematogaster khmerensis -group

the Crematogaster khmerensis -group is easily distinguished from other Asian species of Crematogaster by the vertically directed propodeal spines and large propodeal spiracles.

Species included in the Crematogaster khmerensis -group:

C. khmerensis Hosoishi & Ogata sp. nov.

C. pfeifferi Hosoishi & Ogata sp. nov.

Key to species based on the worker caste

1. Propodeal spiracles large and touching metapleural gland bulla. Petiole scoop shaped, broader anteriorly. Subpetiolar process undeveloped ( Cambodia) ..…………………. C. khmerensis sp. nov.

– Propodeal spiracles large and apart from metapleural gland bulla. Petiole elliptical with convex sides. Subpetiolar process developed acutely (Borneo) ..………………………. C. pfeifferi sp. nov.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Formicidae

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF