Pheidole pilifera (Roger)
publication ID |
20017 |
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https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6274320 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/62936D57-D5B4-07BB-B14C-19D5FCCB4721 |
treatment provided by |
Donat |
scientific name |
Pheidole pilifera (Roger) |
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Pheidole pilifera (Roger) View in CoL HNS
Leptothorax HNS pilifer Roger 1863a: 180. New combination with Pheidole HNS by Emery 1895d: 290. Syn.: Pheidole pennsylvanica Roger HNS 1863a: 199, synonymy by Emery 1895d: 290; Pheidole pilifera var. coloradensis Emery HNS 1895d: 290, raised to subspecies by Wheeler 1908h: 435, n. syn. (provisional); Pheidole pilifera subsp. coloradensis var. neomexicana Wheeler HNS 1908h: 436, unavailable name (quadrinomial), referred to pilifera HNS by Creighton 1950a: 187; Pheidole pilifera subsp. coloradensis var. simulans Wheeler HNS 1908h: 436, unavailable name (quadrinomial), referred to Pheidole HNS by Creighton 1950a: 186; Pheidole pilifera subsp. septentrionalis Wheeler HNS 1908h: 437, synonymy by Creighton 1950a: 186; Pheidole xerophila subsp. pacifica Wheeler HNS 1915b: 04, referred to Pheidole HNS by Creighton 1950a: 187, n. syn. (provisional); Pheidole pilifera subsp. artemisia Cole HNS 1933b: 616, n. syn. (provisional).
Types Mus. Naturkunde Humboldt-Univ. Berlin.
Etymology Gr pilifera HNS , hairy.
Diagnosis A member of the " pilifera HNS complex" of the larger pilifera HNS group, comprising calens HNS , californica HNS , carrolli HNS , cavigenis HNS , clementensis HNS , creightoni HNS , hoplitica HNS , littoralis HNS , micula HNS , pilifera HNS , polymorpha HNS , rugulosa HNS , senex HNS , soritis HNS , tepicana HNS , and torosa HNS , which complex is characterized by the following traits. Major: dorsal head surface extensively sculptured; occipital lobe horizontally rugulose (or, in carrolli HNS smooth, in littoralis HNS foveate, and in micula HNS and soritis HNS carinulate); postpetiole from above diamond-shaped, trapezoidal, or spinose. Minor: eye medium-sized to large.
P. pilifera HNS is distinguished within its complex by the following combination of traits.
Major: relatively large, HW about 1.6 mm; posterior dorsal profile of head straight or slightly concave; mesonotal convexity prominent and symmetrical in side view; propodeal spines robust, long, and nearly vertical to basal propodeal face; petiolar node in side view tapering apically to a blunt point; postpetiolar node from above very broad relative to petiolar node, and bluntly spinose. Minor: eyes medium-sized; humerus in dorsal-oblique view subangulate; all of head posterior to the clypeus and mesosoma foveolate and opaque.
Closely related to carrolli HNS , but very different in sculpturing of the major.
My synonymy of artemisia HNS , coloradensis HNS , and pacifica follows Creighton (1950a) in placing them as geographic variants, or subspecies, and thence here into synonymy at the species level. However, this assignment is not well documented and thus is regarded as provisional. The pattern of geographic variation within pilifera HNS is as follows. Western populations (" coloradensis HNS ") ranging from North Dakota and Colorado to Nevada display a narrowing of the transverse rugulose band to the rearmost part of the major occiput and loss of the longitudinal carinulae on the vertex (anterior to the occiput), an area that is spotted with coarse foveae and shiny interspaces. The trend is climaxed in Nevada and California (" pacifica ") by replacement of the foveae on the vertex of the major by fine punctures. Southwestward, in Utah and Arizona (" artemisia HNS "), the broad band of occipital rugulae of the major in eastern populations ("typical" pilifera HNS ) is retained, but the carinulae of the vertex are lost and replaced by a shiny surface. Measurements (mm) Major (Haddam, Connecticut): HW 1.60, HL 1.72, SL 0.74, EL 0.24, PW 0.68. Minor (Haddam): HW 0.54, HL 0.60, SL 0.52, EL 0.12, PW 0.36. Color Major: light reddish brown. Minor: medium reddish brown.
range Pheidole pilifera HNS is the most widespread and northward-reaching of all the Nearctic Pheidole HNS . The species, as presently broadly construed, ranges from Massachusetts south to Georgia and west to California, extending through the midwest as far north as Minnesota, North Dakota and southwest to Utah, New Mexico, and Arizona.
Biology Colonies of pilifera HNS excavate crater nests in exposed soil and harvest seeds, which are stored in nest chambers. In Colorado, Gregg (1963) found the species (as " subsp. coloradensis HNS ") abundant at 1500 to 2600 m, in a wide range of habitats, from short-grass prairie, roadsides, and herbaceous semi-desert to mixed canyon forest and mountain mahogany shrub. Sexuals were present in the nest from the first week in June to the last week in July. P. pilifera HNS is also notable in Colorado as the host of the social parasite Pheidole inquilina HNS . In Nevada, pilifera HNS ranges between 900 and 2300 m, nesting in desert and juniper-pinyon woodland, both under stones and in the open soil, where it forms craters 25-60 mm wide (G. C. and J. Wheeler 1986g). According to Stefan Cover (personal communication), "In the eastern U. S. pilifera occurs in open, grassy habitats, especially those with sandy soils containing a little clay. It is less common in pure sand, thus in pine barrens. Mating flights occur in early to mid July. Colonies are monogynous, and the newly mated queens start colonies singly. Minors are 'shy' foragers but recruit to good food sources. Majors seldom leave the nest except when recruited. Their primary function is to block nest passages, which they do effectively."
Figure Upper: major. Lower: minor. CONNECTICUT: East Haddam. Scale bars = 1 mm.
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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