Amitermes lunae Scheffrahn, 2010

Scheffrahn, Rudolf H. & Huchet, Jean-Bernard, 2010, A new termite species (Isoptera: Termitidae: Termitinae: Amitermes) and first record of a Subterranean Termite from the Coastal Desert of South America, Zootaxa 2328 (1), pp. 65-68 : 65-67

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.2328.1.3

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4A0BEC63-C056-FFD2-FF55-736AFB576824

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Amitermes lunae Scheffrahn
status

 

Description. Amitermes lunae Scheffrahn View in CoL sp. nov.

Imago unknown. Soldier ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ). Monomorphic. Head capsule pale yellow on vertex above cephalic gland grading to light ferruginous orange away from gland. Mandibles ferruginous at base becoming darker beyond labrum. Body and legs pale yellow. Head capsule quadrate with rounded corners in dorsal and ventral views, thick and bulbous in lateral view. Mandibles curved ~100˚ with greatest curvature beyond marginal tooth. Mandibles narrowing gradually from marginal teeth to apex. Marginal teeth sub triangular; teeth projecting from edge of blade, not notched from behind. Antennae with 15 articles, 2>3<4=5. Measurements in mm, holotype and paratype, respectively: maximum head width 1.09, 1.07; maximum head length (posterior to left mandible condyle) 1.33, 1.33; maximum head height (postmentum to vertex) 0.86, 0.84; left mandible maximum length (lateral condyle to point) 0.80, 0.79; pronotum maximum width 0.72, 0.69; pronotum maximum length 0.35, 0.35; hind tibia length 0.99, 0.94.

Worker ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 ). Head capsule pale or very pale yellow. Antennae with 15 articles, 2>3<4<5. Enteric valve with six flattened elongate pads lining entire length of P2. Pads covered with minute spines; spines more dense near anterior of pads and becoming larger near the posterior. P2 relatively long and narrow, enteric valve not everted into paunch. Maximum head width (n = 10), mean±SD (range): 1.04mm ±0.020 (1.01–1.09).

Of the nine species of Amitermes known from the Neotropics ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ), the A. lunae soldier is closest to those of A. foreli Wasmann and A. amifer Silvestri as all three have a median, subtriangular marginal tooth. A. lunae is smaller than the latter two and unlike A. foreli , does not build an epigeal mound. A. amifer is also a larger pasture species that nests in logs and mounds of other termites in the Matto Grosso of southern Brazil, Paraguay, and Argentina ( Araujo 1970). Amitermes workers cannot be identified externally, however a critical comparison of enteric valve morphology has not been conducted on this group and may be useful for worker identification. Sands (1992) did not illustrate this character in his African Amitermes revision. Photographs of the enteric valve ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 ) are the first for Amitermes and are meant to stimulate such studies.

The holotype and paratype soldiers and 17 type series workers ( UF vial code PE-171) are deposited, respectively, in the University of Florida Termite Collection (Ft. Lauderdale Research and Education Center, Fort Lauderdale, Florida) and the Florida Collection of Arthropods (Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services , Division of Plant Industry , Gainesville , Florida). The remaining 34 type series workers are equally divided between the Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Paris, and the private collection of JBH. Amitermes lunae is named for its type and only known locality, the Huaca de la Luna archeological site .

A single foraging group of A. lunae consisting of two soldiers and 51 workers was collected by JBH on 5 June 2009 at Huaca de la Luna archeological site near Trujillo, Peru (-8.135, -78.991, 57 m elevation, 5.5 km from the coast) GoogleMaps . We expect that this species will be found in similar localities ranging from extreme southwestern Ecuador, the Sechura and Peruvian deserts, and possibly south into the Atacama desert of Chile .

With the exception of Cuba, Amitermes is a mainland species with A. beaumonti Banks being common in humic localities from the Yucatan to Panama. In South America, A. foreli Wasmann is a dominant mound building species in pastures and grasslands of northern Colombia and western Venezuela. Amitermes amicki Scheffrahn , described from the arid island of Aruba, is sympatric with or replaces A. foreli in the deserts around Barranquilla and the Guajira peninsula in Colombia to the Paraguaná peninsula and Barquisimeto in northern Venezuela. The three remaining described species in South America, are A. excellens , A. aporema Constantino , and A. amifer Silvestri. The first two are Amazonian species and A. amifer occurs in the Gran Chaco of Argentina, Paraguay and the Matto Grosso of Brazil.

Amitermes lunae was collected in order to identify the termite responsible for osteophagy of the skeletal remains of a Moche woman at Huaca de la Luna (Huchet et al. in press). In a more recent 2009 grave excavation where bone consumption was evident (left femur diaphysis), the remains of sub-fossil Amitermes head capsules were discovered close to the skeleton. Additionally, a nearly complete sub-fossil of an Amitermes worker was found inside a small bone fragment. The latter was identified as Amitermes based on generic level dentition patterns of both worker mandibles (Huchet, unpublished). At the same site, JBH also collected Cryptotermes brevis (Walker) infesting structural bamboo. This extends the endemic range of C. brevis north from the Lima vicinity ( Scheffrahn et al. 2009).

The Peruvian and Atacama deserts (-5 to -30˚) is one of the few regions on earth were little or no rainfall occurs. Plant life, however, is supported by riparian habitats from Andean runoff and isolated lomas communities which receive their moisture in the form of fog-deposited dew ( Rundel et al. 2007). The Huaca de la Luna site is adjacent to the Moche River where groundwater supports native vegetation and agricultural irrigation has extended plant growth well beyond the river banks. As noted before, some Amitermes species are suited for desert habitats, however, no subterranean termites have been reported from localities with as little precipitation as at the Huaca de la Luna site.

UF

Florida Museum of Natural History- Zoology, Paleontology and Paleobotany

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Blattodea

Family

Termitidae

Genus

Amitermes

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