Dorylus (Anomma) kohli Wasmann

Wheeler, W. M., 1922, The ants collected by the American Museum Congo Expedition., Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 45, pp. 39-269 : 44

publication ID

20597

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6288886

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B5A2EF05-A58A-DA84-2263-0144B7C12B48

treatment provided by

Christiana

scientific name

Dorylus (Anomma) kohli Wasmann
status

 

Dorylus (Anomma) kohli Wasmann View in CoL   HNS

Twenty workers from Akenge and Niangara, taken from the stomachs of toads (Bufo funereus) and frogs (Kassina senegalensis and Hemisus marmoratum), and a fine series of workers of all sizes from Avakubi (Lang and Chapin) with the following note: "They usually appear in great masses, coming right out of the ground, underneath a piece of meat. Even palm oil, poured on the floor, will attract them in the same way." This observation shows that the species is hypogaeic like the species of Dorylus   HNS , sensu stricto, and not epigaeic like Dorylus (Anomma) nigricans   HNS and its various subspecies and varieties, and agrees with the observations 'of Father Kohl, quoted by Wasmann: "This species seems to be intermediate between the subterranean Dorylus   HNS , sensu stricto, and the driver ants. Its discoverer, Father Kohl, who found it at St. Gabriel near Stanleyville on the Upper Congo, writes as follows: 'The ants just mentioned seem always to wander about beneath the surface of the ground; at any rate, I have seen them on the surface only on three occasions and always after a rain." Wasmann adds the interesting statement: "The subterranean mode of life of D. kohli   HNS may also be inferred from its guests, which are much less like those of Anomma   HNS than of Dorylus helvolus   HNS L. The development of the eyes of Pygostenus pusillus Wasm., which lives with D. kohli   HNS , is about half way between the small eyes of P. raffrayi Wasm., a guest of D. helvolus L.   HNS , and the very large eyes of the Pygostenus species which live with Anomma wilwerthi Emery   HNS . Here, too, there is a hint in regard to the habits of the host." The remarkable wingless phorid Hexacantherophora cohabitans, recently described by H. Schmitz,1 was also found with Dorylus kohli   HNS by Father Kohl at St. Gabriel near Stanleyville.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Formicidae

Genus

Dorylus

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