Tetramorium bonibony, Hita Garcia & Fisher, 2012

Garcia, Francisco Hita & Fisher, Brian L., 2012, The ant genus Tetramorium Mayr (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) in the Malagasy region — taxonomy of the T. bessonii, T. bonibony, T. dysalum, T. marginatum, T. tsingy, and T. weitzeckeri species groups, Zootaxa 3365, pp. 1-123 : 31-33

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3365.1.1

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5253632

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03EF6217-BF27-FFE2-0AC0-FF1F99C0AE00

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Tetramorium bonibony
status

 

Tetramorium bonibony species group

Diagnosis

Eleven-segmented antennae; anterior clypeal margin medially impressed; frontal carinae usually moderately developed; anterior face of pronotum usually well-developed with distinct anterodorsal margin separating anterior face from dorsum, sometimes with anterodorsal margin shaped into a distinct protuberance; margination between lateral and dorsal mesosoma weakly to moderately developed; mesosoma comparatively high (LMI 40–51); propodeal spines medium-sized to long, elongate-triangular to spinose; propodeal lobes triangular and short; petiolar node in profile triangular, squamiform, or cuneiform, usually anteroposteriorly compressed dorsally, in profile much higher than long, in dorsal view typically distinctly wider than long and transverse, anterior and posterior faces generally not parallel, anterodorsal margin often better developed and higher situated than posterodorsal, dorsum then tapering backwards posteriorly; postpetiole approximately rounded; mandibles sculptured; cephalic sculpture distinct, between frontal carinae predominantly longitudinally rugose, posterior head and mesosoma with well-developed reticulate-rugose sculpture; petiole, postpetiole, and gaster usually unsculptured, smooth, and shiny, rarely weak sculpture present on waist segments; all dorsal surfaces of head, mesosoma, waist segments, and first gastral tergite with few to abundant standing hairs, never short, dense, and appressed; sting appendage spatulate.

Comments

The distribution of the T. bonibony species group is restricted to Madagascar, Nosy Be, and Nosy Mangabe, and the group members always live in forest habitats.

The development of the anterodorsal pronotum is comparatively variable among species in the group. It ranges from a weakly developed anterior face and anterodorsal margin (in T. kali ), through a well-developed anterior face and anterodorsal margin ( T. vony , T. sada , T. nosybe , and T. olana ), to a well-developed anterior face and a distinct anterodorsal median protuberance ( T. bonibony , T. popell , and T. trafo ). Despite being often unreliable and variable within some species, colouration seems to be quite useful as diagnostic character for the T. bonibony group. There is almost no variation in colouration within each of the species recognised here. Of the eight group members, one is dark brown, two are bicoloured (yellow and dark brown), and five are yellowish. We do not justify species delimitation based on colour alone, as we also provide morphological or ecological evidence in the species descriptions below. Still, colour is an easy means to distinguish the different members of this group.

The group is easily differentiable from all other 11-segmented species groups. The presence of a distinct protuberance on the pronotum distinguishes the three species T. bonibony , T. popell , and T. trafo directly from all other Malagasy Tetramorium . The remaining group members, except T. kali , cannot be confused with another group due the combination of a well-developed anterior pronotal face, reticulate-rugose sculpture on the posterior head and dorsal mesosoma, and triangular cuneiform petiolar node. Although T. kali lacks a well-developed anterior face and anterodorsal margin of the pronotum, it can be discriminated easily from the other groups. It possesses a unique character set of long propodeal spines, a cuneiform and unsculptured petiolar node, and distinct reticulate-rugose sculpture on posterior head and dorsal mesosoma.

Key to the species of the T. bonibony group (workers)

1. Mesosoma with distinct anterodorsal median protuberance on pronotum ( Fig. 29 View FIGURES 29–31. 29 )................................... 2

- Mesosoma usually with well-developed anterior face of pronotum, but always without distinct anterodorsal median protuberance on pronotum ( Figs. 30, 31 View FIGURES 29–31. 29 ).......................................................................... 4

2. Bicoloured species with brown to dark brown head and mesosoma and yellow to light brown waist segments and gaster; propodeal spines very long (PSLI 37–44) ( Fig. 32 View FIGURES 32 & 33. 32 )...................................................... T. bonibony

- Uniformly coloured species; propodeal spines medium-sized to long (PSLI 26–31) ( Fig. 33 View FIGURES 32 & 33. 32 ). ......................... 3

3. Petiolar node in profile distinctly triangular cuneiform and strongly anteroposteriorly compressed dorsally; in dorsal view highly transverse (LPeI 18–27; DPeI 400–590) ( Fig. 34 View FIGURES 34 & 35. 34 )................................................. T. popell

- Petiolar node in profile less strongly triangular, generally slightly cuneiform and only weakly anteroposteriorly compressed dorsally; in dorsal view less transverse than above (LPeI 48–54; DPeI 161–188) ( Fig. 35 View FIGURES 34 & 35. 34 )....................... T. trafo

4. Antennal scape comparatively longer (SI 76–82); anterior mesosoma without well-developed anterior face of pronotum ( Fig. 36 View FIGURES 36 & 37. 36 )............................................................................................. T. kali

- Antennal scape comparatively shorter (SI 65–73); anterior mesosoma with well-developed anterior face ( Fig. 37 View FIGURES 36 & 37. 36 ).......... 5 5. Bicoloured species with brown to dark brown head and mesosoma and yellowish to brownish waist segments and gaster ( Fig. 38 View FIGURES 38–40. 38 )............................................................................................ T. sada

- Uniformly coloured species ( Figs. 39, 40 View FIGURES 38–40. 38 )................................................................... 6 6. Body colouration brown to dark brown ( Fig. 41 View FIGURES 41 & 42. 41 )...................................................... T. nosybe

- Body colouration yellow to light brown ( Fig. 42 View FIGURES 41 & 42. 41 )............................................................. 7 7. Petiolar node cuneiform, in profile less anteroposteriorly compressed dorsally, in dorsal view less transverse (LPeL 45–50; DPeL 183–200) ( Fig. 43 View FIGURES 43 & 44. 43 )......................................................................... T. olana

- Petiolar node triangular cuneiform, in profile strongly anteroposteriorly compressed dorsally, in dorsal view highly transverse (LPeL 31–40; DPeL 245–333, generally around 300) ( Fig. 44 View FIGURES 43 & 44. 43 )............................................. T. vony

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Formicidae

Genus

Tetramorium

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