Blepharidatta

Brandão, Carlos Roberto F., Feitosa, Rodrigo M. & Diniz, Jorge L. M., 2015, Taxonomic revision of the Neotropical Myrmicinae ant genus Blepharidatta Wheeler, Zootaxa 4012 (1), pp. 33-56 : 42

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4012.1.2

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:4C19542E-7753-48E2-8462-0684ADDAD72D

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6092291

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/CA5A7740-FFF3-DC0F-FF2C-FF58F5F49C0D

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Blepharidatta
status

 

Key to the identification of Blepharidatta View in CoL workers

(The present key can also be used to identify Blepharidatta gynes, except for B. conops of which the gynes are the only ones with phragmotic heads [ Figs 2 C, E View FIGURE 2. A – H ])

1a. Eyes bulging, strongly projecting and distinct in full face view ( Figs 1 A, C, E View FIGURE 1. A – H ); propodeal spines shorter than the petiole in lateral view (figs 2 B, D, F)............................................................................... 2

1b. Eyes only moderately convex, concealed by the frontal carinae in full face view ( Fig. 1 G View FIGURE 1. A – H ); propodeal spines extremely developed, as long as the petiole in lateral view ( Fig. 2 H View FIGURE 2. A – H ); Colombian and western Brazilian Amazon................................................................................................... Blepharidatta fernandezi sp. n.

2a. In frontal view, anterior face of pronotum weakly delimited and covered by irregular and sparse rugulation ( Figs 1 B, C View FIGURE 1. A – H ); dorsal surface of head and dorsum of mesosoma feebly and irregularly sculptured, devoid of thick longitudinal rugae ( Fig. 1 A–D View FIGURE 1. A – H )................................................................................................... 3

2b. In frontal view, anterior face of pronotum almost vertical and densely covered by a row of short longitudinal rugae ( Fig 1 E View FIGURE 1. A – H ); dorsal surface of head and dorsum of mesosoma entirely covered by thick longitudinal to subconcentric rugae ( Fig. 1 E–F View FIGURE 1. A – H ); Atlantic Forest of southern Bahia and northeastern Minas Gerais, Brazil.................... Blepharidatta delabiei sp. n.

3a. Smaller species (workers circa 2.5 mm in total) ( Figs 1 A–B View FIGURE 1. A – H ); body uniformly yellowish; head, mesosoma and waist areolaterugose, opaque; almost flat compound eyes concealed by the frontal carinae in full face view; petiolar node dorsally convex; widespread in the Amazon Forest, from eastern Brazil (Pará), southern Venezuela and eastern Ecuador........................................................................................... Blepharidatta brasiliensis Wheeler View in CoL

3b. Larger species (workers circa 4.5 mm in total) ( Figs 1 C–D View FIGURE 1. A – H ); body light-brown to black, with gaster and appendages lighter; head, mesosoma and waist weakly and irregularly sculptured, shiny; compound eyes bulging in full face view, conic; petiolar node elongate, feebly differentiated; widespread in Brazilian arid environments (Brazilian cerrados and caatingas)....................................................................................... Blepharidatta conops Kempf View in CoL

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Formicidae

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