Anochetus kanariensis
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6757 |
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https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6284134 |
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https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B49A2F10-F500-8292-A3BD-FD228A3E16B4 |
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Anochetus kanariensis |
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[22] Anochetus kanariensis View in CoL HNS
It seems to me that of the 2 peninsular Indian forms, subsp. kanariensis HNS (fig. 30) and var. obscurior HNS , that Forel assigned to A. orientalis HNS , at least the first one has a good chance of being a species apart, and I have raised it to species rank provisionally.
A. kanariensis HNS has a bright to dark red trunk and node, contrasting with the piceous or black gaster; the head may be red or infuscated. In kanariensis HNS , the front part of the petiolar nodal summit is more or less produced cephalad, and overhangs the anterior slope of the node, so that the slope is usually more or less distinctly concave, unfortunately a character not very well developed in the particular specimen drawn for fig. 30. The types of A. obscurior HNS and A. orientalis HNS are black or nearly so, with partly ferruginous appendages, and the head may be lighter brownish around the corners; the nodes of these forms are broadly rounded above, not noticeably produced anteriorly, and the anterior slope is straight or convex as seen from the side. In kanariensis HNS , the first gastric tergum is coarsely and distinctly striate almost to the posterior margin, with coarse superimposed punctures, whereas in obscurior HNS , at least, the punctures predominate, and the striae are indefinite or obsolete on the anterior first gastric tergum, while the posterior half of this tergum becomes more or less smooth and shining (satiny blue reflections on the gastric dorsum may often be seen in all 3 taxa).
The A. orientalis HNS type (MNHN-Paris), from Cochin China, has never been compared directly with the Indian forms. My brief notes made on it in 1963 indicate that orientalis HNS is much like the obscurior HNS types before me in color and form, but that the sculpture in orientalis HNS may be more opaque over a wider area of the gastric dorsum than in obscurior HNS . The wide geographic separation of the two forms (as presently known) dictates that they both be kept as provisional separate species, at least until we can compare them directly. More samples of these forms from SE Asia would of course also help in determining their status.
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