Megalomyrmex wettereri, Brandão, 2003
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1590/S0031-10492003000800001 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/1D368786-FFBE-8616-FF38-F9BBC5F581B4 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Megalomyrmex wettereri |
status |
sp. nov. |
Megalomyrmex wettereri n. sp.
( Figs 1-4)
Megalomyrmex wettereri , n. sp. worker, gyne. Type Loc.: Costa Rica, Heredia, La Selva (10°26’N, 84°01’W), “em ninho Trachymyrmex bugnioni ” (18 workers), collected by J. Wetterer in March 2,199 3, 50-150 m, INBIO-OET GoogleMaps ; Panama, Panama Prov. Km 7 of El Llano Carti Suitupo Road , in June 07, 1998 (09°18’02”N, 78°57’31”W), Ulrich Mueller 980607-01 (one gyne – funiculus missing, two workers) “ NMNH 2014315 View Materials ” GoogleMaps .
Types
Holotype and five worker paratypes (La Selva) deposited at MCZ, Harvard; five paratypes (La Selva) and two paratypes (worker and gyne from Panama) deposited at the MZSP; five worker paratypes (La Selva) and one worker paratype ( Panama) deposited at the USNM; two worker paratypes (La Selva) deposited at the BMNH.
Worker
Mandibles smooth, except for the coarse rugosities at the external area near the base ( Fig. 1), dental formula 2+6; palp formula 3:2 (?); anterior clypeal border without median denticle; compound eye with 5 ocular facets at its largest diameter; occipital margin not raised; promesonotal suture not impressed dorsally ( Fig. 2), mesonotum undistinguished from pronotum; metanotal groove longitudinally rugose; katepisternum smooth; propodeum spiracles laterally projected in an angle of 45° from the main axis of the body; base with divergent carinae at the meeting with propodeum sides, declivity smooth; epipetiolar carina not complete over the foramen; dorsal profile of petiole, in side view, evenly curved till apex of node, ventral face with a pronounced anteromedian double denticle ( Fig. 3) originating in a non-translucent short longitudinal flange; dorsal margin of petiolar node, in frontal view, round; ventral process of postpetiole produced in a sharp tooth.
Color: uniformly bright yellow; apex of segments reddish.
Gyne
Three equally developed ocelli; mesonotum with notaulus; katepisternum distally rugose; propodeum dorsal face and declivity meeting in an angle similar to that of the conspecific workers; petiole and postpetiole also similar in shape and sculpture to the con-specific workers.
Diagnosis
The mandibular dentition and shape of propodeum distinguish M. wettereri , n. sp. from all other species in the Silvestrii group.
Comments
This is another Megalomyrmex of the Silvestrii group that inhabits the nests of fungus growing ants, in a peculiar lestobiotic relationship. The type specimens were found inside a nest of Trachymyrmex bugnioni ( Attini ), collected by J. Wetterer ( Fig. 4), to whom the name of this species is dedicated, and inside a nest of Cyphomyrmex longiscapus in Panama collected by U. Mueller.
Adams et al. (1998 -1999; 2000) described the finding of two colonies of this new species in Panama containing healthy fungus gardens of C. longiscapus , although no attines were present at the time of collecting. According to these authors, laboratory observations revealed that the Megalomyrmex “consume the fungus by cropping mycelium from the garden substrate. However, they do not forage for and add nutrient substrates, or otherwise tend the fungus garden; thus, when the garden becomes depleted, Megalomyrmex sp. must locate and usurp new gardens in other attine colonies”. When presented with active colonies of C. longiscapus , workers of this new species displace “host” workers in mass raids, stinging and ultimately killing the apparent defenseless C. longiscapus . When presented with C. longiscapus larvae in the laboratory, M. wettereri n. sp. workers strip them of the mycelium layer that naturally covers the cuticle, then place the larvae with their own brood. Adams et al. (1998 -1999) considered this Megalomyrmex as a predator on C. longiscapus as they forcibly eject the resident attine to usurp their fungus gardens.
Adams et al. (2000) described in detail how this species conducts mass raids to usurp gardens of C. longiscapus , then lives in the garden and consumes the fungi. Megalomyrmex wettereri n. sp. workers feed their larvae with attine brood only after removing the fungal mycelium that covers the attine larval integument, suggesting that this fungal coat may provide partial protection against predators.
Pusillus group
Workers of the species in this group are relatively small inhabitants of the leaf litter, and hence rare in collections, but the most prone to be collected using recently adopted techniques, such as the Winkler extraction apparatus, soil samples or Berlese funnels.
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