Leptothorax tuberum

Collingwood, C. A., 1979, The Formicidae (Hymenoptera) of Fennoscandia and Denmark., Fauna Entomologica Scandinavica 8, pp. 1-174 : 75-76

publication ID

6175

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6283802

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C6D8B6F8-5A43-B0C8-BA6B-6B646BF4FBC2

treatment provided by

Christiana

scientific name

Leptothorax tuberum
status

 

22. Leptothorax tuberum View in CoL   HNS (Fabricius, 1775) Figs. 99, 101.

Formica tuberum Fabricius   HNS , 1775:393.

Workers. Colour varies from entirely pale yellowish brown with the head pale to almost black and the dorsum of the gaster brownish. The antennal clubs are brown to brownish black contrasting with the rest of the funiculus. The head and clypeus are longitudinally striate and the alitrunk rugose. The petiole node has a distinct but short truncate dorsal area; propodeal spines are very short but quite distinct. Length: 2.3-3.4 mm.

Queen. Brown to brownish black with scutellum striate throughout, rest as worker. Length: 3.7-4.5 mm.

Male. Brownish black; appendages very pale; antennal scape as long as 4 following segments. Space between notauli rugulose. Length: 2.5-3.2 mm.

Distribution. Common in South Norway, Sweden and Finland north to about latitude 62°, local in Denmark and in the coastal counties of S. England. - Range: a common and very widely distributed species in the mountains of Central Europe from Spain to the Caucasus and North Italy to Central Sweden.

Biology. This species characteristically nests in small single queened colonies under stones and in rock crevices. In Scandinavia it is restricted to warm lowland habitats. The alatae are found in July and August.

Note. The original and very brief description was based on Swedish material but the types are lost. Most Scandinavian samples have dark heads and could be referred to the supposed species L. nigriceps Mayr   HNS , 1855. In England where L. tuberum   HNS is locally abundant along the south coast, the colour tends to be uniformly pale but samples also occur with dark heads and there are no structural differences between dark headed and light coloured series.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Formicidae

Genus

Leptothorax

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