Pyramica hathor Bolton, 2000

Bolton, B., 2000, The ant tribe Dacetini. With a revision of the Strumigenys species of the Malgasy Region by Brian L. Fisher, and a revision of the Austral epopostrumiform genera by Steven O. Shattuck., Memoirs of the American Entomological Institute 65, pp. 341-369 : 346-347

publication ID

8538

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:AA3AF36F-DAE3-48E6-812F-8A9934C335BE

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6279741

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/8623CDE2-0B25-5566-3D27-EFD3BFD67935

treatment provided by

Donat

scientific name

Pyramica hathor Bolton
status

sp. n.

Pyramica hathor Bolton   HNS sp. n.

HOLOTYPE WORKER. TL 3.0, HL 0.74, HW 0.49, CI 66, ML 0.10, MI 14, SL 0.39, SI 80, PW 0.32, AL 0.80. Characters of hoplites-complex. Dorsum of head with sparse short erect simple hairs behind highest point of vertex. Dorsolateral margin of head in fullface view without laterally projecting hairs; one or two short hairs project posteriorly from the occipital margin. Antennal scrobe smooth and shining, its posterior margin merely demarcated by a shallow impression of the surface, without a rim or edge marking the boundary of the scrobe. Eye with 7 ommatidia in the longest row. Short erect simple hairs present dorsally as follows: 2 pairs anteriorly on pronotum, one pair on mesonotum, 2 pairs on petiole node, 2 pairs on disc of postpetiole, 10 or more on first gastral tergite. Similar hairs also project forward in a spaced row down the anterior face of the front coxa, and sparse similar but suberect to subdecumbent hairs occur dorsally on the basal half to two-thirds of each femur. Pronotum transversely convex; posterior half of mesonotum and entire propodeum laterally marginate in dorsal view. Propodeal teeth elongate, narrow and acute apically; at least half the length of each tooth is free of the lamella. Anterior face of petiole node confluent with the elongate convex dorsum. Lateral spongiform lobes of petiole vestigial and almost invisible in profile; in dorsal view seen to be confined to a tiny outgrowth on each side at the posterolateral angles. Ventral spongiform curtain of petiole in profile scarcely deeper than the maximum depth of petiole itself. Ventral lobe of postpetiole slightly smaller than the exposed cuticular area of the disc. Whole body smooth and shining. Petiole laterally with feeble punctulate sculpture and both waist segments may have a few weak costulae laterally.

PARATYPE WORKERS. TL 3.0 - 3.1, HL 0.74 - 0.76, HW 0.48 - 0.50, CI 65 - 66, ML 0.11, MI 14 - 15, SL 0.40, SI 80 - 83, PW 0.30 - 0.33, AL 0.78 - 0.84 (2 measured). As holotype but both with pronotal hairs lost by abrasion so that only a single anterior hair remains in each.

P. hathor   HNS is the most easily differentiated species within the hoplites-complex. It separates from the other 3 species by its long scapes (SI 80 - 83, as opposed to SI 59 - 68 in the others combined), and its vestigial lateral petiolar lobes. Apart from this, hathor   HNS lacks the 4 setae arranged in a square around the highest point of the vertex that distinguishes hoplites   HNS and serket   HNS , and has about half the length of the propodeal teeth free of the lamella, which in the other two species extends almost to the very tips of the teeth. In seti   HNS the lateral petiolar spongiform lobes are intermediate in size between the tiny vestiges seen in hathor and the extensive lobes developed in hoplites   HNS and serket   HNS , but they are still very distinct in seti. Beside this seti   HNS also has a marked rim bounding the posterior margin of the scrobe (absent in hathor) and is much more densely hairy. P. seti   HNS has numerous hairs projecting laterally from the side of the head behind the eye (absent in hathor), has many more than 3 pairs of erect hairs on the promesonotum (3 pairs at maximum in hathor), and possesses a spaced row of projecting hairs ventrally on each femur (absent in hathor).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Formicidae

Genus

Pyramica

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