Tetramorium alpestre, Steinera & Seifertb & Moderc & Schlick-Steinera, 2010

Steinera, Florian M., Seifertb, Bernhard, Moderc, Karl & Schlick-Steinera, Birgit C., 2010, A multisource solution for a complex problem in biodiversity research: Description of the cryptic ant species Tetramorium alpestre sp. n. (Hymenoptera: Formicidae), Zoologischer Anzeiger 249 (2010), pp. 223-254 : 249-250

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1016/j.jcz.2010.09.003

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8206184

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038E87B2-1771-B632-FCCF-DE1289999823

treatment provided by

Julia

scientific name

Tetramorium alpestre
status

sp. nov.

Tetramorium alpestre sp.n. Steiner, Schlick-Steiner and Seifert ( Figs. 2–9 View Fig View Fig View Fig View Fig View Fig View Fig View Fig View Fig ; Tables 1 View Table 1 and 2 View Table 2 )

Type locality. Austria (Tyrol): Vent, 46.8548 ◦ N, 10.9097 ◦ E, 2000 m a.s.l.; immediately above timber line; vegetation mainly grass with interspersed dwarf shrubs ( Erica sp. and others; ca. 10–20 cm high) and patches free of vegetation (small rocks, stones, bare soil); holotype nest large (ca. 3 m 2); other ant species found close to holotype nest: Formica lemani Bondroit, 1917 , Leptothorax acervorum (Fabricius, 1793) , Myrmica sulcinodis Nylander, 1846 ; all information provided by H. Müller.

Holotype ( Fig. 9 View Fig ). Worker labelled “AUS: 46.8548 ◦ N, 10.9097 ◦ E, Vent, 2000 m, Weg zur MartinBusch-Hütte, leg. H. Müller 2007.08.15 -1, # 251 ”. Collection date: 15 August 2007. Deposition: Senckenberg Museum of Natural History Görlitz. GoogleMaps

Paratypes: 4 workers, 2 males, 3 gynes from holotype nest series (Senckenberg Museum of Natural History Görlitz) ; 7 workers, 1 male, 1 gyne from holotype nest series (Museum of Natural History Vienna) ; 7 workers, 1 male, 1 gyne from holotype nest series (Tiroler Landesmuseum Ferdinandeum in Innsbruck); 6 workers, 1 male, 1 gyne from holotype nest series (collection of B.C. Schlick-Steiner and F.M. Steiner, housed by the Institute of Ecology of the University of Innsbruck) ; 5 workers, 3 gynes with same data as holotype nest series but #252 (Senckenberg Museum of Natural History Görlitz) ; 16 workers, 2 gynes with same data as holotype nest series but # 252 (collection of B.C. Schlick-Steiner and F.M. Steiner, housed by the Institute of Ecology of the University of Innsbruck) .

Other material examined: see Table 1 View Table 1 .

Etymology: The species epithet is an adjective derived from alpes (lat.).

Worker ( Table 2 View Table 2 ): Description: general body proportions: small sized (arithmetic mean CS 0.753 mm). Eye short and narrow (EL/CS 0.196, EW/CS 0.150). Compared to T. impurum , scape thicker (SWd/SLd 12.75% vs. 12.25%), mesosoma longer (ML/CS 1.201 vs. 1.167) and wider (MW/CS 0.648 vs. 0.634), setae on pronotal corners shorter (PnHL/CS 0.237 vs. 0.252), spine tips more distant (SPWI/CS 0.305 vs. 0.295), petiolar and postpetiolar nodes wider (PEW/CS 0.335 vs. 0.321, PPW/CS 0.421 vs. 0.410) and postpetiolar node higher (PPH/CS 0.368 vs. 0.355). Body sculpture similar to T. caespitum et sp. B. Typical but not always reliable differences to T. impurum are: central dorsum of postpetiolar node often fully smooth and brilliantly shining. Paramedian and lateral postpetiole in dorsal view with regular, convexly curved carinulae or carinae; these are usually not wrinkled as often seen in T. impurum . Interspaces between longitudinal rugae on dorsal pronotum often almost smooth with absent or less developed fine anastomoses or delicate microreticular structures. Colouration on average darker and more homogeneous than in T. impurum , with whole body usually medium to dark brown. Mesosoma frequently not distinctly lighter than head and gaster, dirty yellowish brown colour component (as frequently seen in T. impurum ) missing. Only reliable distinction from T. caespitum et sp. B and T. impurum: DA using nest mean values (at least two but ideally three workers) and characters CL/CW, CS, dCV, FL/CS, ML/CS, MPSP/CS, MW/CS, PENL/CS, PEW/CS, PnHL/CS, PosSPu/CS, PreOc/CS, SLd/CS, TAS. DA can be performed using a freely accessible identification tool embedded in the internet, at: http://web-resources.boku.ac.at/Discmean/.

Male ( Fig. 3 View Fig ): Description: relatively small-sized (values in mm): CW: arithmetic mean 0.900 ± standard deviation 0.042 [minimum 0.831, maximum 0.969]; ML 2.284 ± 0.081 [2.152, 2.366] (n = 10 individuals). Head, mesosoma and waist segments homogeneously blackish (in T. impurum usually with brownish colour component). Surface sculpture variable: mesonotum varying from almost smooth and shining with reduced longitudinal carinulae to almost completely covered by diagonal, curved or semicircular carinulae. Morphological asymmetries and malformations frequent in non-genital body parts. Distinction from T. caespitum et sp. B and T. impurum is best possible by genitalia. Overall spatial structure of genitalia in T. alpestre more similar to T. impurum . In lateral view, stipes of T. alpestre and T. impurum differ from T. caespitum et sp. B by rounded apex and apodeme positioned more anterior than apical level. In T. caespitum et sp. B, apex and apodeme positioned at almost same transversal level, both with roughly rectangular profile of apical stipes and much more pronounced apodeme. Best separation of T. alpestre and T. impurum in dorsocaudal aspect: in T. alpestre , gripping jaw of stipes with three dents or protrusions, the dent intermediate between anteriormost (formed by apodeme) and caudalmost, apical protrusion being acute; in T. impurum , intermediate dent absent or only shallow and blunt. Absolute genital sizes of T. alpestre and T. impurum typically different, but with slight overlap: maximum distance from dorsal posterior margin of cardo to stipal apex in T. alpestre (values in mm) arithmetic mean 0.812 ± standard deviation 0.044 [minimum 0.748, maximum 0.871] (n = 10 individuals), in T. impurum 0.977 ± 0.061 [0.859, 1.098] (n = 21).

Thermal niche: TAS (in ◦ C): arithmetic mean 8.1 ± standard deviation 1.6 [minimum 5.5, maximum 12.2] (n = 22 sites).

mtDNA ( Figs. 5–7 View Fig View Fig View Fig ): 16 haplotypes of cox1 (1113 bp) known; GenBank accession numbers: see Table 1 View Table 1 .

Habitat: Alpine mats.

Geographic and altitudinal distribution ( Figs. 4 View Fig and 8 View Fig ): The Alps in Austria, France, Italy and Switzerland, the Jura in Switzerland (indicated by two nests inferred to be hybrids between T. alpestre and T. impurum , see “Remarks” below); 44.42–47.22 ◦ N, 6.65–13.71 ◦ E; 1300–2335 m a.s.l.

Phenology ( Table 1 View Table 1 ): Alates recorded inside nests 2 July to 10 September.

Social organisation: Only known Western Palearctic species of the T. caespitum / impurum complex with functional polygyny (more than one queen per nest egg-laying) and supercolonies (absence of aggression between workers from different nests) ( Steiner et al., 2003).

Remarks: Two ambiguous nests (#260, #261) from Swiss Jura, not included in description, are inferred to represent hybridisation of T. alpestre and T. impurum ; hybridisation between these two species could be facilitated by overlapping altitudinal distribution, potentially overlapping nuptial flight phenology, and overall similarity of male genital structure (see Section 5.4. for details); no indication of hybridisation from Alps.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Formicidae

Genus

Tetramorium

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