Cataglyphis holgerseni Collingwood & Agosti, 1996

A. Ionescu & P. - A. Eyer, 2016, Notes on Cataglyphis Foerster, 1850 of the bicolor species-group in Israel, with description of a new species (Hymenoptera: Formicidae), Israel Journal Of Entomology 46, pp. 109-131 : 120-121

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.221456

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:0FE0E11B-3411-4204-A63D-DB23DDE5A379

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5621363

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5F2F5A00-FF84-FFE0-FE89-454F6A2CC19D

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Cataglyphis holgerseni Collingwood & Agosti, 1996
status

 

Cataglyphis holgerseni Collingwood & Agosti, 1996

(Figs 14, 18, 19)

Recognition: This is a large species (worker TL>10, MW>1.45) of the urens species-complex (Agosti 1990). Male has subgenital plate with short, triangular median process and two lateral distally divergent appendages (Fig. 18) similar to C. urens Collingwood (Agosti 1990, Fg. 18) vs. parallel appendages in other Israeli species (Figs 21, 24, 27, 30). Stipes distinctly curved apically in lateral view (Fig. 19) vs. nearly straight in other Israeli species (Figs 22, 25, 28, 31). C. holgerseni worker has shortest and narrowest head relative to mesosoma width as compared to the other investigated species ( Table 1 View Table 1 ). It has raised mesonotum over pronotum in all 50 examined specimens; C. holgerseni has high propodeum with nearly straight dorsum and declivity that form a rounded right-angle in lateral view (Fig. 14), similar to C. urens , differing from lower propodeum in sympatric C. isis and C. cf. savignyi ( Tables 1 View Table 1 , 2 View Table 2 ). Scape and leg distinctly longer than in C. cf. savignyi ( Table 1 View Table 1 ), e.g. for MW=1.54, hTbL=4.56 (4.52–4.60) in 29 C. holgerseni vs. hTbL=3.99 (3.94–4.04) in 22 C. cf. savignyi from Hazeva; hTbL/mFmL=1.19–1.28, n=28, intermediate between C. isis and C. cf. savignyi . Cataglyphis holgerseni has propodeal dorsum from metanotal groove to propodeal spiracle without erect setae as opposed to profuse pilosity in C. isis . Usually entirely black, some specimens of C. holgerseni have dark red frons and, rarely, dark brown head and mesosoma. C. holgerseni differs from C. urens by more massive petiole node with average PNH=0.37 vs. 0.30 for PNL=0.71 and PNA=62–71° vs. 55–63°, respectively.

Measurements: TL=6.8–13.2, HL=1.70–2.87, HW=1.46–2.70, EL=0.47–0.76, iOD=1.05–1.95, OcClD=0.80–1.37, SL=2.19–3.63, F1L=0.51–0.86, F2L=0.29– 0.51, ML=2.83–4.49, MW=1.05–1.91, PrL=0.94–1.52, PrH=0.33–0.62, PNL= 0.56–0.97, PNW=0.37–0.70, PNH=0.27–0.55, PNA=62–71°, mFmL= 2.38–4.45, hTbL=3.69–5.52 (n=30).

Material examined: Cataglyphis holgerseni : Israel: Hazeva Field School, 20.vii.1992, A. Hefetz (2☿), 16.ii.1994, Shapira (6☿); 22.iii.1994, A. Ionescu (2☿); 2012, R. Zeltzer (3☿); Hazeva, 2012, R. Zeltzer (7☿); Nahal Shezaf, 15.i.1994, Shapira (2☿); Nahal Shahaq, 15.i.1994, Shapira (2☿), 17.viii.1999, I. Yarom (14☿); Ein Yahav, 25.ii.2009, A. Ionescu (3☿); Elat, 5.v.1976, B. Shalmon (4☿, 1♀, 1Ƌ), 2012, R. Zeltzer (6☿). Jordan: Aqaba, xi.1942, Feiga (3☿).

C. urens : Saudi Arabia: Wadi Shugub Turabah, 6.iv.1980, W. Buttiker (1☿); Riyadh, 1.vi.1980, Dr. Dishl (1☿); Sulaiel desert, 11.iv.1980, C.A. Collingwood (1☿).

Distribution: C. holgerseni is distributed in Israel in the ’Arava Valley ( Fig. 1), in Egypt (Sinai), Jordan and the Arabian Peninsula (Collingwood & Agosti 1996).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Formicidae

Genus

Cataglyphis

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF