The ants collected by the American Museum Congo Expedition.
Author
Wheeler, W. M.
text
Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History
1922
45
39
269
http://plazi.org:8080/dspace/handle/10199/17097
journal article
20597
Crematogaster menilekii (Forel) subspecies proserpina Santschi
,
new subspecies
"Worker. - Length 3.2 to 4 mm. Pale brownish yellow; head, gaster, and appendages shining; thorax and petiole nearly opaque. Front and sides of head finely striate, the remainder with a few punctures. Anterior border of head and the corners obliquely truncated. Postpetiole narrower than in the typical
menilekii
, completely sulcate in the middle, forming two ovoidal eminences. Gaster broader than the head. Allied to
C. alulai
Emery and
C. menilekii subspecies satan (Forel)
." (Santschi)
Numerous workers from Malela (Lang, Chapin, and J. Bequaert), with the following note: "Ants living in the stalks of Papyrus and making carton nests in their crowns. The workers swarm out in great masses and let themselves drop on the intruder. They bite furiously and it is difficult to get rid of them, as they work themselves upward on the body, attacking by preference the softer parts of the skin."1