Myrmecina gratiosa
publication ID |
8127 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6296956 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/CB8C3DED-6ACE-B9EC-AC27-BFB5ED9AF15A |
treatment provided by |
Donat |
scientific name |
Myrmecina gratiosa |
status |
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3. Myrmecina gratiosa View in CoL HNS . B.M.
Worker. Length 4 lines.-Head, thorax, legs, and nodes of the petiole, ferruginous; abdomen smooth, shining black. Head large, wider than the thorax or abdomen, longitudinally striated, the striae stronger and more deeply impressed on the anterior portion of the face; the mandibles triangular, striated, and armed with strong black teeth on their inner margin. Thorax: its margins raised, the lateral angles of the anterior margin produced and acute; the disk longitudinally striated, with a deep strangulation between the meso- and metathorax, the latter coarsely rugose, and having on each side a short blunt tooth; the sides of the mesothorax have also a sharp angle or tooth at their margins at the verge of the strangulation, before which the sides are rounded; the femora very much thickened in the middle and much attenuated at their base and apex, the tibiae slightly incrassate; the legs very smooth and shining with the tarsi deep ferruginous. Abdomen ovate, narrowed at the base, which is slightly rufous; the nodes of the petiole rugose, the first elongated, the second subglobose; the first node is produced in the middle above into a short acute spine, and it has also a spine at its base beneath.
Female. Length 6 1/4 lines.-Of the same colour as the worker: the head rather more elongate-quadrate; the thorax elongateovate, sculptured as in the worker; wings subhyaline, the nervures pale rufo-testaceous, the stigma fuscous; the femora swollen as in the worker; the basal node is raised in the middle to a sharp transversely rounded edge, not spined; beneath, at its base, is a flattened acute tooth: otherwise like the worker.
Hab. Australia (Adelaide).
This fine species is placed provisionally in the genus Myrmecina HNS : a dissection of the parts of the mouth would determine that question; it is however closely allied to that genus, if not belonging to it; the neuration of the wings only diners in their anterior pair having the cubital vein and also the subdiscoidal vein continued to the apical margin of the wing.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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