Crematogaster mimosae Santschi

Sharaf, Mostafa R., Aldawood, Abdulrahman S. & Garcia, Francisco Hita, 2019, Review of the Arabian Crematogaster Lund (Hymenoptera, Formicidae), synoptic list, distribution, and description of two new species from Oman and Saudi Arabia, ZooKeys 898, pp. 27-81 : 27

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.898.37531

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:52448626-026D-4D5B-BB75-5097E06814D7

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E8FAF849-0321-5858-8694-7962BD29E469

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Crematogaster mimosae Santschi
status

 

Crematogaster mimosae Santschi Figure 27 A–C View Figure 27

Taxonomic history.

Crematogaster mimosae Santschi, 1914a: 87, fig. 11 (w.) Kenya: Menozzi 1939: 105 (q.).

Combination in Crematogaster ( Crematogaster) : Wheeler 1922: 841; in Crematogaster (Acrocoelia) : Emery 1922: 148; in Crematogaster ( Crematogaster) : Bolton 1995: 166.

Current subspecies: C. mimosae tenuipilis Santschi.

Geographic range.

Initially described from Kenya, in the Afrotropics this species is East African in its distribution found in Kenya, Uganda, Somalia, Sudan, and Tanzania ( Guénard et al. 2017; Janicki et al. 2017). In the Arabian Peninsula, it was recorded from the KSA, Oman, the UAE and Yemen ( Collingwood 1985, Collingwood and Agosti 1996; Borowiec 2014; Sharaf et al. 2018) ( Fig. 25 View Figure 25 ).

Remarks.

Crematogaster mimosae is one of four species of obligate acacia ants, which have been well studied in East Africa, mostly Kenya (e.g., Young et al. 1997; Martins 2010). From a taxonomic perspective, this is one of the “easy” cases within the genus in Arabia, thus very straightforwardly identifiable.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Formicidae

Genus

Crematogaster