Adelomyrmex tristani ( Menozzi, 1931 )
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.282199 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:7F5C6597-DCE6-45CA-9DD8-ED64139177E7 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6168419 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C0DF2B-B924-B53A-FF0C-FACAFF31FAFE |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Adelomyrmex tristani ( Menozzi, 1931 ) |
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Adelomyrmex tristani ( Menozzi, 1931) View in CoL
( Figs 1, 6 View FIGURE 6 , 9 View FIGURE 9 , 11 View FIGURE 11 , 21 View FIGURE 21 )
Apsychomyrmex tristani Menozzi, 1931: 269 View in CoL , fig. 6. Holotype worker: Costa Rica, La Palma ( Tristan) [presumably DEI] (not examined). Combination in Adelomyrmex: Kempf, 1972: 18 View in CoL . Description of queen: Fernández, 2003: 30.
Adelomyrmex brevispinosus Fernández , in Fernández & MacKay, 2003: 596, figs. 1–3. Holotype worker: Costa Rica, Heredia: 9 km N vο1cán Βarba̓ ₁Ο° ₁3'N 8₄°Ο6'W̓ ₁75Ο m̓ ₄ Ju1 ₁986̓ wet fοrest 1ȋtter (J· Lοngȋnο #₁3₁₄s) [specȋmen cοde INBIOCRI001279889] [INBio] (examined). See also: Fernández, 2003: 15. NEW SYNONYMY.
Geographic range. southern Mexico to Costa Rica, Ecuador (?)
Biology. Adelomyrmex tristani is a common cloud forest ant throughout Central America. It is most often collected in Winkler samples, but may also occur at baits.
At multiple sites in Central America it occurs in sympatry with A. paratristani , a species whose range is contained largely within the range of A. tristani . There is a tendency for A. tristani to be most abundant in regions peripheral to the range of A. paratristani . There is some geographic variation in both A. tristani and A. paratristani , such that both could be split into multiple allopatric or parapatric species in the future, but currently there is no evidence for multiple sympatric forms within the current definition of A. tristani .
Adelomyrmex tristani is most abundant in the northern part of its range, in the Cordillera de Chiapas, extending into the mountains of western Guatemala. It is abundant in cloud forest from 1500-2000 m, occurring in up to 70% of quantitative miniWinkler samples. It occurs as high as 2700 m at Cerro Huitepec near San Cristobal de las Casas, Chiapas.
AntWeb images of a specimen from an Ecuadorian cloud forest look like A. tristani , and thus the range may extend into South America.
Comments. Adelomyrmex tristani was recognized by Fernández (2003) as highly variable and likely consisting of multiple cryptic species. Large community samples taken by the LLAMA project revealed that at several sites in Central America, two sympatric species occur that both key to A. tristani . In this work I hypothesize two broadly sympatric species, each of which shows substantial geographic variation. In general, when the two species co-occur, A. tristani is the smaller of the two, with shorter, denser, more reclining pilosity, especially on the face and gaster. Adelomyrmex paratristani is larger, with longer, sparser, more erect setae. Where the range of A. tristani overlaps with A. paratristani , the queen has the mesonotum largely smooth and shining, while A. paratristani has the mesonotum largely longitudinally rugose, with an anteromedian triangular patch that is smooth and shining. In the southern part of the range, where it does not overlap with A. paratristani , the queens have mesonotal sculpture like A. paratristani .
In broad terms, A. tristani shows centers of abundance along the Pacific side of Central America, in the Sierra de Chiapas, the Guatemalan volcanoes from Volcan Atitlán to the mountains east of Guatemala City, the Sierra de Comayagua in Honduras, western and southern Nicaraguan mountains, and the mountains of Costa Rica. It becomes a rare element as one moves inland and eastward. In contrast, A. paratristani dominates the core mountain areas of northern Nicaragua, Honduras, Guatemala, and central Chiapas.
Two populations sampled by the LLAMA project are distinctive variants. The population on the south slope of Volcán Atitlán has very short propodeal spines, reduced to short, 90° angles, and the pilosity is very short. Populations in the Sierra de Chiapas to the north and the mountains around Guatemala City to the east have more developed, acute propodeal spines, and the pilosity is slightly longer. A population near La Unión, Guatemala, in Zacapa Department, has relatively sparse, erect gastral pilosity, like A. paratristani , and the dorsal promesonotal rugae are weak, on some specimens leaving a smooth shiny region anteromedially. The population is clearly differentiated from the local version of A. paratristani , in pilosity and size. HW of A. tristani in this population is 0.48–0.56 mm. The local population of A. paratristani has HW 0.62–0.68, and the pilosity is longer.
Adelomyrmex brevispinosus was differentiated from A. tristani by a small median smooth spot on the dorsal promesonotum. Specimens were reported from Costa Rica and Chiapas. However, specimens of A. brevispinosus from these two different regions otherwise look identical to their respective surrounding populations of A. tristani , paralleling the geographic variation. I conclude that A. brevispinosus falls within the intraspecific variability of A. tristani .
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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Adelomyrmex tristani ( Menozzi, 1931 )
Longino, John T. 2012 |
tristani
Kempf 1972: 18 |
Menozzi 1931: 269 |