Pseudomyrmex veneficus ( Wheeler 1942 )
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.10150 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:80669360-1DB2-4B74-9F4B-99DD3E7EBBFA |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3513222 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4E27C946-C7F9-C3BD-04C3-3C36CAFA32A9 |
treatment provided by |
Donat |
scientific name |
Pseudomyrmex veneficus ( Wheeler 1942 ) |
status |
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Pseudomyrmex veneficus ( Wheeler 1942) View in CoL View at ENA
(Figs. 17, 28, 62, 69)
Pseudomyrma belti subsp. venefica Wheeler 1942:162 . Syntype workers, males, queens, Escuinapa , Sinaloa, Mexico (J. H. Batty) ( AMNH, MCZC) [Examined], One MCZC syntype worker here designed LECTOTYPE .
Pseudomyrma belti subsp. venifica Enzmann 1945:81 . Syntype workers, queens, Manzanillo , Colima, Mexico (C. H. T. Townsend) ( MCZC) [Examined] [Synonymy by Brown 1949:42] .
Pseudomyrmex venefica [sic] (Wheeler); Janzen 1969:241.
Pseudomyrmex belti veneficus (Wheeler) ; Kempf 1972:216.
Pseudomyrmex veneficus (Wheeler) ; Ward 1989:439.
Worker measurements (n= 12). - HL0.95-1.04, HW 0.85-0.95, MFC 0.045-0.073, Cl 0.88-0.95, REL 0.44-0.47, REL2 0.47-0.52, OOI 1.26-2.30, VI 0.66-0.75, FCI 0.051-0.081, SI 0.43-0.46, SI2 0.85-0.94, NI 0.58-0.65, PLI 0.60-0.67, PWI 0.58- 0.67, PPWI 1.35-1.73.
Worker diagnosis. - Similar to P. ferrugineus (q.v.) except as follows. Smaller (LHT 0.69-0.80), with broad head (Cl> 0.87); frontal carinae separated by basal scape width or less (FCI 2 0.40-0.60); petiole short (PL 0.43-0.54) and relatively narrow (see PWI values) with somewhat rounded posterolateral angles (Fig. 28). Head densely punctulate, subopaque to sublucid, with weak silvery reflectance. Overlying rugulo-punctate sculpture on propodeum weak and ill-defined. Standing pilosity variable in abundance, becoming rather short (≤ 0.10 mm) and sparse in southern populations. Pubescence thick and conspicuous, suberect on some surfaces especially the propodeum and petiole; suberect pubescence on petiolar dorsum contrasting with the appressed pubescence on the postpetiole (Fig. 28). Very dark greyish-brown to black, parts of the mesosoma and petiole sometimes with lighter yellowish brown (more consistently so in the queen).
Comments. - The small size (worker HW <0.96; queen HW 0.84-0.96, n=12), conspicuous suberect pubescence on the propodeum and petiole, and black coloration of the head and gaster distinguish workers and queens of P. veneficus . The related species, P. flavicornis , is larger (worker HW> 0.98, queen HW 1.12-1.19) with a broader and more robust petiole (Figs. 25, 28). Workers and queens of P. flavicornis also lack the sublucid head and conspicuous suberect pubescence characteristic of P. veneficus . P. mixtecus is somewhat intermediate between these two - it has the head sculpture and pubescence typical of P. flavicornis but approaches P. veneficus in size (worker and queen head widths overlapping, although only slighter in the queens where HW 0.96-1.01 (n=8) in P. mixtecus ) and petiolar dimensions (Figs. 44-47).
Distribution and biology. - P. veneficus has a limited distribution in western Mexico (Sinaloa to Michoacan) (Fig. 69) where colonies occupy Acacia hindsii and, at one locality, A. collinsii . Janzen (1973) gives a detailed description of the ecology and behavior of this highly polygynous, effectively unicolonial, species whose colonies are among the largest of all social insects (containing millions of workers and several hundred thousand queens).
Material examined ( AMNH, CASC, EBCC, INHS, LACM, MCSN, MCZC, MZSP, PSWC, UCDC, UCRC, USNM). -
MEXICO Col.: 9.4mi NW Manzanillo (D.H.Janzen) ; Manzanillo (C.H.T.Townsend ; W.M.Wheeler) ; Paso del Rio , 200ft. (I.J.Cantrall) ; Jal.: 2km E Chamela , 20m (P.S.Ward) ; 5km E Chamela , 50m (P.S.Ward) ; 6mi NE El Rincon , 1600ft. (R.J.Hamton) ; Barra de Navidad (N.L.H.Krauss) ; Chamela (R.J.McGinley ; J.F. Watkins) ; Mich.: 1.1 mi N Gabriel Zamora , 820m (D.H.Janzen) ; 1.5miNLaMira (D.H.Janzen) ; 15km WNW Playa Azul , 50m (P.S.Ward) ; Nay.: 12mi NE San Bias (W.J.Gertsch & W.Ivie) ; 16mi NW Tepic (W.E.LaBerge) ; 31miNTepic (D.H.Janzen) ; 37mi N Tepic (D.H.Janzen) ; 4mi E San Bias (M.E.Irwin) ; Rio Palillo, 14mi E San Bias (D.H.Janzen) ; Sin.: 14.6mi S Mazatlan (D.H.Janzen) ; 20mi E Villa Union (E.I.Schlinger) ; 20mi E Villa Union , 235m (M.E.Irwin ; E.Schlinger et al.) ; 20mi S Villa Union (E.I.Schlinger) ; 5mi E Concordia (W.J.Gertsch & J.A.Woods) ; Escuinapa (J.H.Batty) ; Palmito (L.de Mauzo) ; Piedra Blanca (R.M.Bohart) ; state unknown: “Mexico” (c.u.) .
AMNH |
USA, New York, New York, American Museum of Natural History |
MCZC |
USA, Massachusetts, Cambridge, Harvard University, Museum of Comparative Zoology |
CASC |
USA, California, San Francisco, California Academy of Sciences |
EBCC |
Mexico, Jalisco, San Patricio, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Estacion de Biologia "Chamela" |
INHS |
USA, Illinois, Champaign, Illinois Natural History Survey |
LACM |
USA, California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles County Museum of Natural History |
MCSN |
Italy, Genova, Museo Civico di Storia Naturale "Giacomo Doria" |
MZSP |
Brazil, Sao Paulo, Sao Paulo, Museu de Zoologia da Universidade de Sao Paulo |
PSWC |
PSWC |
UCDC |
USA, California, Davis, University of California, R.M. Bohart Museum of Entomology |
UCRC |
USA, California, Riverside, University of California |
USNM |
USA, Washington D.C., National Museum of Natural History, [formerly, United States National Museum] |
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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Genus |
Pseudomyrmex veneficus ( Wheeler 1942 )
Ward, Philip S. 1993 |
Pseudomyrmex venefica
Hoelldobler & Engel (1979), Hoelldobler & Engel-Siegel 1985 |
Pseudomyrma belti subsp. venifica
Enzmann 1945: 81 |
Pseudomyrma belti subsp. venefica
Wheeler 1942: 162 |