Tetramorium lanuginosum Mayr, 1870
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2022.838.1925 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:D495BCAE-9E03-4424-A01B-87F1CEB16B9C |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7094515 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/1461EC42-FFDE-FFF6-FDBF-0518154CF99A |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Tetramorium lanuginosum Mayr, 1870 |
status |
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Tetramorium lanuginosum Mayr, 1870 View in CoL
Fig. 49 View Fig
Tetramorium lanuginosum Mayr, 1870: 976 View in CoL (w) Indonesia (Java). Indomalaya.
Diagnosis
Color ranges from light brown to dark brown, gaster darker than body; anterior clypeal margin with small median notch; cephalic surface strongly reticulate-rugose; eyes with 8–10 ommatidia in longest row; frontal carinae well-marked; antennal scrobes well-defined; mesosoma convex in profile; metanotal groove indistinct; propodeal spines long and sharp; gaster smooth and shiny; body hairs long and profuse, bifid and simple.
Material examined
Holotype
INDONESIA • Java, Batavia ; CASENT0235202; NHMW.
Additional material
OMAN – Dhofar • 1 w; Dhalkout , 16.727° N, 53.249° E; alt. 623 m; 18 Nov. 2017; SF; M.R. Sharaf leg.; KSMA GoogleMaps • 2 w; Dhalkout Road, Aghbaroot Village ; 16.798° N, 53.554° E; alt. 1034 m; 18 Nov. 2017; SF; M.R. Sharaf leg.; KSMA GoogleMaps • 5 w; Ayn Dirbat ; 17.106° N, 54.453° E; alt. 207 m; 17 Nov. 2017; SF; M.R. Sharaf leg.; KSMA GoogleMaps • 1 w; Salalah ; 17.019° N, 54.065° E; alt. 9 m; 18 Nov. 2017; SF; M.R. Sharaf leg.; KSMA GoogleMaps • 5 w; Dhalkout ; 16.707° N, 53.251° E; alt. 34 m; 19 Nov. 2017; SF; M.R. Sharaf leg.; KSMA GoogleMaps • 1 w; same collection data as for preceding; CASENT0922857; CASC GoogleMaps • 1 w; Ayn Razat ; 17.124° N, 54.238° E; alt. 98 m; 20 Nov. 2017; SF; M.R. Sharaf leg.; KSMA GoogleMaps • 11 w; Dhalkout ; 16.693° N, 53.156° E; alt. 628 m; 18 Nov. 2017; SF; M.R. Sharaf leg.; KSMA GoogleMaps .
Ecological and biological notes
The diverse nesting and feeding habits presumably has allowed a successful worldwide distribution. Nests are built in moist soil under stones, in leaf litter ( Sharaf et al. 2018a), under trunks of dead palm trees, and in soil that is rich in organic matter ( Sharaf et al. 2017c). In Dhofar, workers are foraging on ground in a shaded area with dense plant cover of grasses and shrubs.
Geographic range
It is a successful tramp species, originally described from Indonesia which has widely dispersed into tropical and subtropical regions ( Bolton 1976; Wetterer 2010a; Hita Garcia & Fisher 2011; Agavekar et al. 2017). It has been previously collected from Oman ( Sharaf et al. 2018a), KSA ( Collingwood & Agosti 1996), the Socotra Archipelago ( Collingwood et al. 2004; Sharaf et al. 2017c), Egypt ( Sharaf 2006), and Palestine ( Vonshak & Ionescu-Hirsch 2009). This species is recorded for the first time in Dhofar.
NHMW |
Naturhistorisches Museum, Wien |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Tetramorium lanuginosum Mayr, 1870
Sharaf, Mostafa R., Wetterer, James K., Mohamed, Amr A. & Aldawood, Abdulrahman S. 2022 |
Tetramorium lanuginosum
Mayr G. 1870: 976 |