Myrmelachista flavoguarea, Longino, J. T., 2006

Longino, J. T., 2006, A taxonomic review of the genus Myrmelachista (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) in Costa Rica., Zootaxa 1141, pp. 1-54 : 20-23

publication ID

21030

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:323B9B2C-F6AE-40B5-982B-4BBEA5317786

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6262092

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B06468CF-B816-3D93-9D9D-E10CC9480A4D

treatment provided by

Thomas

scientific name

Myrmelachista flavoguarea
status

NEW SPECIES

Myrmelachista flavoguarea   HNS NEW SPECIES

Figures 1, 6, 12, 13

Holotype queen: Costa Rica, Alajuela, Refugio Eladio, Rio Penas Blancas , 10°19’N, 84°43’W, 800m , 23 Dec 1986 (J. Longino #1501) [ INBC, specimen code JTLC000002744 ]. GoogleMaps

Paratypes: all same locality as holotype, queens and workers; JTLC000002745 , 27 Apr 1987 (J. Longino #1616) [ MCZC] GoogleMaps ; JTLC000002746 , 28 Apr 1987 (J. Longino #1624) [ USNM] GoogleMaps ; JTLC000002747 , 20 May 1987 (J. Longino #1678) [ UCDC] GoogleMaps ; JTLC000006198 , 22 May 1987 (J. Longino #1682) [ LACM] GoogleMaps ; JTLC000006199 , 30 Apr 1988 (J. Longino #2046) [ BMNH] GoogleMaps .

Diagnosis

Worker antenna 9-segmented, maxillary palpus 6-segmented, color yellow with darker gaster. Queen head orange, HW 1.17-1.24mm. Male with pygostyles present, basiparamere lobes and parameres very long and thin, digitus evenly tapered to apex. Obligate inhabitant of understory Guarea .

Worker

Antenna 9-segmented; maxillary palpus 6-segmented; dorsal surface of mandible rugose; clypeus and face smooth; in full face view, with abundant short subdecumbent setae projecting from rear margin and sides of head, cluster of longer setae on posterolateral vertex; ventral surface of head with abundant short subdecumbent setae; scapes with abundant erect to subdecumbent setae, longer setae subequal to width of scape; outer surface of hind tibia with abundant short suberect setae, longer setae about half width of tibia; head and mesosoma yellow orange, gastral tergites with broad bands of infuscation.

Measurements: HL 0.636-0.865, HW 0.598-0.803, SL 0.308-0.376, EL 0.112-0.141, CI 93-99 (n=5).

Queen

Antenna 9-segmented; maxillary palpus 6-segmented; labrum short, bilobed, not covering mouthparts; dorsal surface of mandible punctatorugose; anterior face and clypeus faintly roughened, grading to smooth and shining posteriorly; in full face view, with abundant short subdecumbent setae projecting from rear margin and sides of head; ventral surface of head with abundant erect setae, many exceeding width of scape; scapes with abundant erect to suberect setae, longer setae subequal to width of scape; outer surface of hind tibia with abundant erect to subdecumbent setae, longer setae subequal to width of tibia; petiolar node broadly rounded in lateral view; head, and mesosoma including petiole yellow orange, gaster dark brown.

Measurements: HL 1.336-1.422, HW 1.170-1.242, SL 0.544-0.579, EL 0.289-0.321, OW 0.087-0.095, OD 0.161-0.185, CI 85-89, OI 25-27, OcI 6-7 (n=5).

Male

Antenna 10-segmented; maxillary palpus 5 or 6-segmented; pygostyles present, sclerotized, setose; basiparamere lobe thin, pointed, about half the length of the paramere; paramere long, thin, with parallel sides; cuspis small, subrectangular, with series of small denticles at apex; digitus long, narrow, curved, with a series of tiny denticles on dorsal margin at contact point with apex of cuspis; apodeme of penial valve curving into dorsal margin at obtuse angle.

Etymology

The name refers to the yellow color of the queen head and its association with the plant genus Guarea .

Range

Costa Rica. In Costa Rica it is known from one site, at 800m on the Rio Peñas Blancas in the Cordillera de Tilarán.

Biology

This species occurs in mature wet forest understory. It is an obligate inhabitant of an undescribed species of Guarea (Haber, pers. comm.). Most species of Guarea are large canopy trees; this species is an understory treelet, reaching reproductive maturity at 2-3m height. It is always a single stem from ground to shoot apex, with no lateral branches. Colonies of Myrmelachista   HNS occupy the entire stem, from ground level to the shoot apex. At Refugio Eladio in the Peñas Blancas Valley, the one site where I have collected M. flavoguarea   HNS , the tree is moderately common. Nearly every tree I have examined has contained M. flavoguarea   HNS , and I have never collected M. flavoguarea   HNS in any other situation. Thus, it appears to be an obligate inhabitant of this Guarea species.

There may be one or two physogastric colony queens. Occasional Coccoidea occur inside the stems. The only entrance holes are near the shoot apex. A few workers are occasionally seen on the surface near the shoot apex, but inside the stems are densely packed with hundreds of workers.

The biology of this species appears very similar to M. flavocotea   HNS , nigrocotea   HNS , lauroatlantica   HNS , lauropacifica   HNS , osa   HNS , and haberi   HNS , which are all obligate inhabitants of understory Lauraceae.

Material Examined

COSTA RICA, Alajuela: Refugio Eladio, Rio Penas Blancas , 10°19’N, 84°43’W, 800m (J. Longino, 15 collections). GoogleMaps

INBC

Costa Rica, Santo Domingo de Heredia, Instituto Nacional de Biodiversidad (INBio)

MCZC

USA, Massachusetts, Cambridge, Harvard University, Museum of Comparative Zoology

USNM

USA, Washington D.C., National Museum of Natural History, [formerly, United States National Museum]

UCDC

USA, California, Davis, University of California, R.M. Bohart Museum of Entomology

LACM

USA, California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles County Museum of Natural History

BMNH

United Kingdom, London, The Natural History Museum [formerly British Museum (Natural History)]

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Formicidae

Genus

Myrmelachista

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