Temnothorax congruus (F. SMITH, 1874 )

Radchenko, A., 2004, A Review Of The Ant Genera Leptothorax Mayr And Temnothorax Mayr (Hymenoptera, Formicidae) Of The Eastern Palaearctic, Acta Zoologica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae 50 (2), pp. 109-137 : 121-123

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.12586852

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/F8458E06-396B-1773-FD99-FB7CFE5CFC8B

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Temnothorax congruus (F. SMITH, 1874 )
status

 

Temnothorax congruus (F. SMITH, 1874)

( Figs 26, 27 View Figs 24–31 )

Leptothorax congruus F. SMITH, 1874: 406 View in CoL , workers, Japan, Hyogo; WHEELER, 1906: 316, queens, males; EMERY, 1921: 253; CHAPMAN & CAPCO, 1951: 110; ONOYAMA, 1980: 197; TERAYAMA et al., 1992: 27; RADCHENKO, 1994 b: 150; BOLTON, 1995: 237; RADCHENKO, 1996: 16; KIM, 1996: 176; 2003: 2; TERAYAMA & ONOYAMA, 1999: 83; IMAI et al., 2003: 157; LYU & CHO, 2003: 271, nec COLLINGWOOD, 1976: 303 (misidentification).

Temnothorax congruus : BOLTON, 2003: 271.

Material examined: dozens of workers from Japan, Korea and Russian Far East.

Distribution. Japan (Hokkaido, Honshu, Shikoku, Kyushu), Russia (south of Primorsky Region), Isl. Kunashir, NE China, Korean Peninsula.

Ecology. It inhabits different kinds of forests and meadows, builds nests mainly in rotten wood, but sometimes in soil, often under stones.

Notes. T. congruus is a small blackish-brown species with short propodeal spines. It most resembles T. wui and differs from it by the shape of the petiole, whose node has a wide, slightly convex dorsal plate (in T. wui the petiolar node is very narrowly rounded, subtriangular in profile, Figs 27 View Figs 24–31 and 39 View Figs 32–41 ); the sculpture of

(paratype, 31). (24, 26, 28, 30) Head, dorsal view; (25, 27, 29, 31) alitrunk and waist in profile the head dorsum: frons with longitudinal rugae and coarse punctures, remaining parts punctate (in T. wui the whole head dorsum finely and densely punctate, striated only near the eyes; the central part of frons with a smooth and shiny longitudinal band, Figs 26 View Figs 24–31 and 39 View Figs 32–41 ). T. congruus differs from T. kurilensis (RADCHENKO) by its much shorter antennal scape, which distinctly fails to reach the occipital margin, SI 1 <0.73, SI 2 <0.90 (in the latter species the scape almost reaches or slightly surpasses the occipital margin, SI 1> 0.75, SI 2> 0.94), and by the shorter propodeal spines ( Figs 27 and 31 View Figs 24–31 ).

The specimens from North Korea, determined by COLLINGWOOD (1976) as T. congruus , are in fact Vollenhovia emeryi WHEELER (material is in HNHM, examined).

HNHM

Hungarian Natural History Museum (Termeszettudomanyi Muzeum)

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Formicidae

Genus

Temnothorax

Loc

Temnothorax congruus (F. SMITH, 1874 )

Radchenko, A. 2004
2004
Loc

Temnothorax congruus

BOLTON, B. 2003: 271
2003
Loc

Leptothorax congruus F. SMITH, 1874: 406

KIM, B. - J. 2003: 2
IMAI, H. T. & KIHARA, A. & KONDOH, M. 2003: 157
LYU, D. - P. & CHO, S. 2003: 271
TERAYAMA, M. & ONOYAMA, K. 1999: 83
RADCHENKO, A. G. 1996: 16
KIM, B. - J. 1996: 176
BOLTON, B. 1995: 237
RADCHENKO, A. G. 1994: 150
TERAYAMA, M. & CHOI, B. - M. & KIM, Ch. - H. 1992: 27
ONOYAMA, K. 1980: 197
COLLINGWOOD, C. A. 1976: 303
CHAPMAN, J. W. & CAPCO, S. R. 1951: 110
EMERY, C. 1921: 253
WHEELER, W. M. 1906: 316
SMITH, F. 1874: 406
1874
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