Cyphoidris
publication ID |
22490 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6226767 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6BAB8C44-43E8-8BAC-8032-4F68420C410D |
treatment provided by |
Christiana |
scientific name |
Cyphoidris |
status |
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The status of Cyphoidris View in CoL HNS Weber
Cyphoidris HNS Weber, 1952: 26. Type species (by monotypy): Cyphoidris spinosa Weber HNS , 1952: 26 (Ituri Forest, 15 miles N of Beni, ZAIRE).
C. exalta (Bolton) HNS , 1981: 258, fig. 17; Korup Reserve, CAMEROON.
C. parissa (Bolton) HNS , 1981: 258; Gibi, LIBERIA.
C. spinosa (Weber) HNS , 1952: 26, figs 7, 8; Ituri Forest, 15 miles N of Beni, ZAIRE.
C. werneri (Bolton) HNS , 1981: 259; Rangiro, RWANDA.
Bolton (1981) suggested affinity between Lordomyrma HNS and the Afrotropical genus Cyphoidris HNS (Figs. 23, 24) Three characters putatively distinguishing the latter: (1) antennae 11- versus 12-merous; (2) palpal formula unreduced, maxillary 4: labial 3; and (3) propodeal spiracles close to the posterolateral margins of the declivity. The first feature remains characteristic of Cyphoidris HNS versus Lordomyrma HNS . The second is now known in at least one Asian Lordomyrma HNS species ( L. azumai HNS - see above), where others investigated here have reduced palpal formulae (3:3, 3:2 or 2:2). Bolton (2003) separately records palpal formulae 4:3, 3:3 and 3:2 for Lordomyrma HNS . Character (3) is represented in some Indo-Australian species, while others have propodeal spiracles situated further forwards, towards the middle of the lateral wall of the sclerite. The character 'number of antennal segments', while still used with due discretion, is today accorded little of its former broad significance in myrmicine taxonomy and alone is insufficient to sustain Cyphoidris HNS as a distinct genus. These African taxa are in fact quite close in habitus to the presumably conservative Lordomyrma HNS species of Asia and Australia, and would perhaps have been assigned to Lordomyrma HNS were they Indo-Australian.
Cyphoidris HNS was comprehensively reviewed by Bolton (1981). C. parissa HNS has been reported from West Africa, L. exalta HNS and L. spinosa HNS from Central Africa, and C. werneri HNS from East Africa. C. spinosa HNS was recorded by Bolton from Ituri Forest, Zaire (the type locality), Duque de Braganca Falls, Angola, and Agboville, Ivory Coast; the other species only from their type localities (see species list above). C. spinosa HNS and C. exalta HNS were well illustrated by Bolton (1981, figs 15-17) and the spinosa HNS figures reproduced by Holldobler & Wilson (1990: 103).
The ANIC has specimens of C. exalta, HNS C. spinosa HNS and C. werneri HNS , thanks to the generosity of Barry Bolton( BMNH) and Dr C. Besuchet (Museum d'Histoire Naturelle, Geneva, Switzerland).
Cyphoidris HNS might constitute a biogeographically long-separated sister group to the Asian/Indo-Australian Lordomyrma HNS species. Relevant phylogenetic investigations will need also to consider other, possibly related genera, including Bariamyrma HNS Lattke, 1990, Dacetinops HNS Brown & Wilson (see Taylor, 1985) Lachnomyrmex HNS Wheeler (see Feitosa & Brandao, 2008) Lasiomyrma HNS Terayama & Yamane, 2000, and Rogeria HNS Emery (see Kugler, 1994; Lapolla & Sosa-Calvo, 2006).
ANIC |
Australia, Australian Capital Territory, Canberra City, CSIRO, Australian National Insect Collection |
BMNH |
United Kingdom, London, The Natural History Museum [formerly British Museum (Natural History)] |
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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SubFamily |
Myrmicinae |