Tetramorium caespitum
publication ID |
6435 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8206728 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5A3ACB9B-3078-0033-EA0A-08B4EA86C11C |
treatment provided by |
Christiana |
scientific name |
Tetramorium caespitum |
status |
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The caespitum View in CoL View at ENA -group
Antennae with 12 segments, sting appendage triangular to dentiform. Anterior clypeal margin entire, without a median notch or impression. Frontal carinae short, sometimes virtually absent, never extending back as far as posterior margins of eyes and generally much shorter. Antennal scrobes absent. Metanotal groove almost always impressed in profile, even if only weakly so. Propodeal spines short, usually reduced to a pair of triangular teeth, sometimes reduced to tubercles. Nodes of both petiole and postpetiole in dorsal view at least as broad as long, usually distinctly broader than long. Scapes and hind tibiae dorsally without long, erect or suberect hairs but often with suberect or subdecumbent-appressed pubescence. Dorsal surfaces of alitrunk, pedicel segments and gaster with elongate fine hairs at least in part, never with all hairs short, stout and blunt. Sculpture of head of fine, regular longitudinal rugulation or reduced, in some species the head virtually unsculptured.
This is the dominant and only endemic group of Tetramorium HNS in the Palaearctic region. One species, caespitum HNS , has been introduced into North America (M. R. Smith, 1943; Brown, 1957) and it is now well established in the U. S. A. with a wide range on that continent (Creighton, 1950). The taxonomy of the caespitum-group is in a very poor state, with over 100 names, the majority described as infraspecific or infrasubspecific forms of caespitum HNS itself and many of the names based on meaningless characters or represented by descriptions which can only be called valueless. Because of this a formal description of caespitum HNS is not given here, but the species as it occurs in North America should be easily recognizable from the following summary as it is the only member of its group established on that continent.
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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