Temnothorax morongo, Snelling, Roy R., Borowiec, Marek L. & Prebus, Matthew M., 2014

Snelling, Roy R., Borowiec, Marek L. & Prebus, Matthew M., 2014, Studies on California ants: a review of the genus Temnothorax (Hymenoptera, Formicidae), ZooKeys 372, pp. 27-89 : 39-40

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.372.6039

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:3E2984B8-744B-4EB7-9BB2-303CB30D4EB9

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/3021AE9F-1152-4C4F-A24C-8FBE2B82F281

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:3021AE9F-1152-4C4F-A24C-8FBE2B82F281

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Temnothorax morongo
status

sp. n.

Temnothorax morongo View in CoL sp. n. Figures 9, 19, 24-26

Leptothorax sp. BCA-1; Johnson and Ward 2002: 1023.

Temnothorax sp. CA-1; Ward 2005: 68.

Diagnosis of worker.

First gastral tergum of worker slightly shiny and finely reticulate, with sparse blunt stiff erect setae; mesosoma dull and contiguously punctate between widely spaced longitudinal rugae and pronotal dorsum with transverse anterior carina; propodeal spines long; postpetiole in dorsal view wide.

Description.

Worker measurements (mm) (6 measured): EL 0.152-0.218 (0.173); HFL 0.545-0.763 (0.652); HFW 0.116-0.151 (0.139); HL 0.659-0.87 (0.761); HW 0.537-0.718 (0.607); IOD 0.447-0.611 (0.506); OMD 0.182-0.237 (0.209); PPW 0.270-0.348 (0.302); PSL 0.155-0.227 (0.194); PTW 0.171-0.213 (0.191); PW 0.381-0.510 (0.433); SL 0.544-0.749 (0.627); WL 0.816-1.050 (0.931). Indices: CI 77.3-82.5 (79.8); FI 102-112 (107); OI 21.1-25.1 (22.7); PI 150-165 (158); PSI 22.2-28.3 (25.4); SI 79.5-86.1 (82.4).

Head longer than broad in frontal view; posterior margin transverse and lateral margins essentially parallel. Antenna 12-segmented; scape slightly exceeding posterior margin; apical club distinctly 3-segmented. Eye small, IOD 2.80-3.13 × EL; EL about 0.75-0.92 × OMD. Mandibles coarsely longitudinally rugose. Head opaque and finely reticulate between fine longitudinal rugae; interrugal spaces of clypeus shiny and weakly sculptured. Sparse yellowish very short and stout erect setae on front of head; hypostomal area with scattered very short fine setae.

Mesosoma slender, WL 2.06-2.24 × PW; mesosomal dorsum essentially flat in profile. Propodeal spines well developed, distinctly longer than distance between their bases; in profile directed distad or slightly down–curved; in dorsal view slightly incurved. Entire mesosoma opaque or nearly so between slightly irregular longitudinal rugae; anterior margin of pronotal disc with sharp transverse carina. Dorsum with sparse yellowish short, flattened setae. Metafemur slender, 3.98-5.32 times longer than wide in dorsal view.

Petiole node robust and cuboid in profile; acute subpetiolar tooth present. Postpetiole node rounded in profile; in dorsal view much broader than petiole node. Sculpture and pilosity of both nodes similar to those of mesosomal dorsum.

Gaster in dorsal view 2.01-2.29 times wider than postpetiole; slightly shiny and first tergum wholly finely reticulate and with sparse yellowish, slender suberect to erect setae.

Color of body yellowish to light orange, gaster and appendages slightly lighter.

Gyne and male unknown.

Material examined.

Holotype worker, MEXICO: BAJA CALIFORNIA: 19 km WNW Bahia de los Angeles, 28.98°, -113.75°, 1.vi.1997 (A. Suarez & T. J. Case), Sonoran desert, in pitfall trap (CASENT0339305) [UCDC].

Paratypes. Same data as holotype, 1 worker (CASENT0339305) [UCDC].

Non-paratypic material examined. U.S.A.: CALIFORNIA: Riverside Co.: Joshua Tree National Park, 33.8°, -116.0°, 28.v.1979 (E. L. Sleeper, #ELS2100) quail guzzler, 1 worker (CASENT0103108) [LACM]; Riverside Co.: Joshua Tree National Park, 33.8°, -116.0°, 25.vi.1966 (E. L. Sleeper) quail guzzler, 1 worker (LACMENT299328) [LACM]; Riverside Co.: Joshua Tree National Park, 33.8°, -116.0°, 9.vii.1966 (E. L. Sleeper) quail guzzler, 1 worker (LACMENT299329) [LACM]; MEXICO: BAJA CALIFORNIA SUR: Isla Carmen S end, 20 m, 25.86°, -111.22°, 13-18.vii.1999 (R. Aalbu, #ABRA11) 1 worker (CASENT0339306) [UCDC].

Etymology.

Named for the Morongo, a band of the Cahuilla people who occupied occupied the northern part of this species range, in what is now Joshua Tree National Park. The name is a noun in apposition.

Remarks.

In the keys of Creighton (1950) and Mackay (2000) Temnothorax morongo will run to Temnothorax silvestrii ( Santschi 1911), an arboreal species from Arizona, which it resembles. In Temnothorax silvestrii the sculpture of the head and mesosoma is coarser, the head is proportionately a little broader, the propodeal spines are much shorter and the metafemora are much more robust, about three times longer than thick in dorsal view (also see Creighton 1953).

All known collections of this species are from pitfall traps, suggesting that this is a ground-nesting ant.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Formicidae

Genus

Temnothorax