Adelomyrmex
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.32035 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6273884 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0AF88DAE-3875-3A87-BCBC-138C41AD81E2 |
treatment provided by |
Thomas |
scientific name |
Adelomyrmex |
status |
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Adelomyrmex View in CoL HNS genus-group (Figs. 1-77)
Genera included: Adelomyrmex Emery HNS and Baracidris Bolton HNS .
Diagnosis. Myrmicine ants with the following combination of characters:
Mandibles with 4 to 6 teeth in the masticatory margin. Internal side of mandibles with a row of 2-3 to 5-6 hairs modified as lamelliform setae. Clypeus with raised median longitudinal plate, ridge or strip. Palpal formula 2,2 or less. Frontal lobes not extending posteriorly as frontal carinae. Antennal scrobes absent. Antennae 12 segmented, with club 2-segmented. Propodeum angulated or armed with teeth. U-shaped sulcus in the basalmost portion of the first abdominal tergum. Monomorphic.
Discussion. Two features noted above and setation of the clypeus require some discussion. The most interesting character, evidently an autapomorphy for the group, is the presence of modified setae on the internal face of the mandibles. Most ants exhibit setae on the internal face of the mandibles, mainly in form of a parallel row near the masticatory margin (Figs. 1, 2, 3). This configuration is more or less general in ants, with some few setae scattered or diffuse ( Ponerinae , Pseudomyrmecinae HNS , Formicinae HNS , Myrmicinae HNS ). For Adelomyrmex HNS genus group, there is an important difference: these setae are lamelliform, transparent, varying in length and shape (Figs. 4, 5), from narrow and long to triangular or subtriangular. These lamelliform setae are very small and transparent, which makes their observation difficult with traditional magnification and light. Moreover, they need to be viewed from certain angles with particular light incidence. Also, in the ants normally mounted with mandibles closed, the internal setae are not visible. Only with the SEM pictures are the lamelliform setae easily visible (Figs. 4, 5) as a result of the gold coating.
The size and position of the lamellae suggest that these are modified setae, as stated below. These modified setae are very flexible, because in specimens with closed mandibles these structures bend on the integument. When a previously dry specimen is dampened and is mounted with open mandibles, the setae return to their erect position without breaking. The function of these structures is unknown, although they could be implicated in some type of sensorial specialization. Longino (1997) speculates about some kind of special prey for Adelomyrmex HNS , based on the clypeomandibular configuration (lateral clypeal teeth opposed to teeth in basal margin of mandible, Fig. 9). Unfortunately we do not know what these ants eat.
In some Adelomyrmex HNS species the modified setae are parallel to the occlusal border, with few or none near the basal tooth of the basal margin. In other species, seemingly, the setae are located more toward the basal margin of the mandible or are limited to two on the internal face of the basal margin, between the tooth of basal margin and the basal tooth of occlusal margin.
Although the U-shaped sulcus in the most basal portion of the first tergum (Fig. 6) may be a synapomorphy for the group (Bolton, pers. comm.), this structure is only shallowly impressed in some species. In workers of some other myrmicine genera (e.g. Myrmicaria HNS sp., Meranoplus mucronata HNS ) a similar structure is evident, and in the females of Solenopsidini HNS this sulcus is very deep. However, most myrmicines examined lack this sulcus(e.g. Myrmica HNS , Hylomyrma HNS , Monomorium HNS , Megalomyrmex HNS , Solenopsis HNS , Ochetomyrmex HNS , Tranopelta HNS , Pheidologeton HNS , Atopomyrmex HNS , Colobostruma HNS , Daceton HNS , Pheidole HNS , Aphaenogaster HNS ). I postulate that this trait has evolved more than once in Myrmicinae HNS .
The genus Adelomyrmex HNS exhibits an apical median seta on the clypeus, distinguished from the other clypeal setae, which I postulate as an apomorphic condition, but ancestral for the group. Nonetheless, the other genus of the group, Baracidris HNS , lacks this feature (at least the seta was not apparent at 200 X), which I believe to be a loss. Its absence could be a consequence of the reduction of the median clypeal fringe. However, if the clypeal configuration in Baracidris HNS and some Adelomyrmex HNS ( A. biroi HNS and A. hirsutus HNS ) is postulated to be ancestral, that is to say, the median portion of the clypeus represented merely by a narrow fringe, and the configuration in the species of the genus Adelomyrmex HNS is the derived condition, it can be thought that a central seta is an apomorphy for this genus alone, rather than for the Adelomyrmex HNS genus-group.
The Solenopsis HNS genus group possesses an apical clypeal seta projected forward (Bolton, 1987). However, this group exhibits other traits (number of antennomeres in antennae and antennal club) that excludes the possibility of the inclusion of Adelomyrmex HNS (and Baracidris HNS ) in the group. The median clypeal seta is also observed sporadically in some Stenammini HNS . Because the nearest tribe to Solenopsidini HNS seems to be Pheidologetonini HNS (Bolton, pers. comm.), which lacks the central clypeal seta, I postulate that the presence of a central seta could be a convergence among Solenopsidini HNS , Adelomyrmex HNS genus group and some Stenammini HNS .
How could a central seta have evolved in Adelomyrmex HNS ? In the ancestral situation we can imagine a continuous, flat clypeus with a row of apical setae of similar size (as in Myrmica HNS or Tetramorium HNS , Fig. 1). When the median bulge of the clypeus developed, some of these setae "migrated" to different positions, leaving one of them as central, accompanied at sides by paracarinal setae (Ettershank, 1966). In Solenopsidini HNS the clypeus does not present the degree of modifications as in Adelomyrmex HNS genus group; so the presence of a central seta must have an independent origin in this group. The same may be stated for those few Stenammini HNS that possess a central clypeal seta.
Geographical distribution. The range of the Adelomyrmex HNS genus-group includes the Neotropical and Afrotropical Regions, New Guinea, toward the eastern end of the Oriental Region, and the Samoan and Fijian archipelagoes in Oceania. See "Biogeographical Considerations ", below.
Key to genera of Adelomyrmex HNS genus-group
1 Basal border of mandible with tooth (as in Fig. 54); apical clypeal seta usually present (as in Fig. 9) and hypostomal bridge with median tooth as in (Fig. 29) or petiolar node low, poorly differentiated (Figs. 64, 65); Neotropics, New Guinea, Fiji, Samoa .......... ...................................................................................................... Adelomyrmex Emery HNS
- Basal border of mandible unarmed (Fig. 69); apical clypeal seta absent or not noticeable(Fig. 69); hypostomal bridge simple; node of petiole high (Fig. 69); West and Central Africa.................................................................................... Baracidris Bolton HNS
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