Aphaenogaster fulva Roger, 1863

Shattuck, Steve & Cover, Stefan, 2016, Taxonomy of some little-understood North American ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae), Zootaxa 4175 (1), pp. 10-22 : 13

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4175.1.2

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:011B74BE-40C0-4606-9354-C637F83C3E43

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3513034

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E5E90B-FF8B-233B-FF3C-9FDEFD5675B9

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Aphaenogaster fulva Roger, 1863
status

 

Aphaenogaster fulva Roger, 1863 View in CoL

Aphaenogaster fulva Roger, 1863: 190 View in CoL View Cited Treatment . Syntype workers, “ North America ” (Berlin Museum für Naturkunde der Humboldt-Universität) [https://www.antweb.org/specimen/ FOCOL 1231 ].

Myrmica (Monomorium) aquia Buckley, 1867: 341 . Neotype worker (here designated) from Concord, Hapgood Wright Town Forest at junction of Route 2 and Route 126 [42°26′N 71°20′W], Middlesex County, Massachusetts, 4 July 1998 (S.P. Cover, SPC #5024 View Materials ) (Museum of Comparative Zoology) [http:// mczbase.mcz.harvard.edu/guid/ MCZ: Ent:552000; http://www.antwiki.org/wiki/ Aphaenogaster View in CoL _ aquia ]. New synonym. GoogleMaps

Creighton (1950) provides an exhaustive history of the name A. aquia . Buckley (1867) did not designate types, leaving us with little more than speculation as to what his name might represent. From the meager description, A. aquia could be any Aphaenogaster native to the northeast, excepting perhaps A. tennesseensis or A. treatae . Mayr (1886) believed it to be a synonym of A. fulva while Emery (1895) treated it as a subspecies of A. fulva . Creighton (1950) felt that what Emery called A. aquia was an intergrade between A. picea and A. rudis , both of which were considered to be subspecies of A. fulva at that time, with A. picea being the higher elevation form occurring in the Appalachian Highlands and A. rudis a lower elevation form found in the piedmont areas at the base of the Highlands. He concluded that “We do not know what Buckley's aquia was. Emery's aquia appears to have been an intergrade which should never have been named. I propose, therefore, to place aquia in the list of unrecognizable forms.” Subsequent authors followed Creighton’s lead and have left the name aquia alone for over 50 years.

To permanently resolve the status of Buckley’s aquia we here designate a neotype. This specimen is conspecific with the currently accepted concept of A. fulva , and thus Myrmica (Monomorium) aquia Buckley becomes a junior synonym of A. fulva Roger.

SPC

Seattle Pacific University

MCZ

Museum of Comparative Zoology

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Formicidae

Genus

Aphaenogaster

Loc

Aphaenogaster fulva Roger, 1863

Shattuck, Steve & Cover, Stefan 2016
2016
Loc

Myrmica (Monomorium) aquia

Buckley 1867: 341
1867
Loc

Aphaenogaster fulva

Roger 1863: 190
1863
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