Probolomyrmex latalongus, Shattuck & Gunawardene & Heterick, 2012

Shattuck, S. O., Gunawardene, N. R. & Heterick, B., 2012, A revision of the ant genus Probolomyrmex (Hymenoptera: Formicidae: Proceratiinae) in Australia and Melanesia, Zootaxa 3444 (1), pp. 40-50 : 44-45

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3444.1.2

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/9E2D8798-FFE9-0F6C-34FA-6579A4B0BC59

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Probolomyrmex latalongus
status

sp. nov.

Probolomyrmex latalongus sp. n.

( Figs 3 View FIGURE 3 , 7 View FIGURE 7 )

Types. Holotype worker from Solar Village survey, Darwin , Northern Territory, Feb. 2002, A.N. Andersen, unburnt slope 1, litter sample ( ANIC, ANIC32-066457 View Materials ) . Paratypes: 16 workers, same data as holotype (5 in ANIC, ANIC32-011632 View Materials ; 11 in TERC) .

Diagnosis. Petiolar node relatively short and broad and with the anterior and dorsal faces separated by a convexity; subpetiolar process forming a rounded 90° angle anteriorly; body small (HW <0.33mm, ML <0.65mm) and head narrow (CI <66).

Probolomyrmex latalongus is similar to P. greavesi (from Australia) and P. vieti (from Thailand, Vietnam and Indonesia). It differs from both by its smaller size and from P. vieti by the anteriorly angular subpetiolar process (the process having an anterior tooth in P. vieti ).

Worker description. Body ferruginous brown. Head in full-face view with weakly convex sides and very shallowly concave occipital border. Eye absent. Antenna relatively short. Dorsal outline of mesosoma straight; posterior margin of dorsum of propodeum in dorsal view weakly concave; posterior face of propodeum separated from sides by a sharp angle, the lamella being very weakly developed. Petiole including subpetiolar process slightly higher than long, in profile with relatively steep anterior face and straight posterior outline; posterodorsal margin of petiolar node in dorsal view very weakly concave; subpetiolar process developed; its anteroventral portion forming a rounded 90° angle; posteroventral portion of subpetiolar process forming a blunt tooth; ventral surface straight to concave. Abdominal segment III (gastral segment I) in profile relatively short, gently narrowed anteriad in the anterior 2/3; abdominal sternum III weakly and uniformly convex.

Measurements. Worker (n=9)—CI 62–65; DPetW 0.13–0.16; HL 0.46–0.51; HTL 0.25–0.30; HW 0.29–0.32; LPetI 88–98; ML 0.54–0.65; PetH 0.20–0.24; PetNL 0.19–0.22; PronW 0.22–0.25; SI 79–91; SL 0.24–0.28

Additional material examined. (in ANIC except where noted). Australia: Queensland: 11km ENE Mt. Tozer (Weir, T.A.); Cape Tribulation area (Calder, A. & Weir, T.); Mossman Bluff Track, 5–10km W Mossman (Monteith, Thompson & ANZSES); Mt. Webb Natl. Park (Calder, A. & Feehan, J.). Western Australia: Barrow Island (Gunawardene, N. & Taylor, C.) (CUAC); Langi Crossing (Ross, E.S. & Cavagnaro, D.Q.) (CAS).

Comments. This is by far the most widely distributed species of Probolomyrmex in Australia. It ranges across northern Australia from Barrow Island in the west to Cape York Peninsula in the east. It also occurs in a wide range of habitats, from rainforests on Cape York Peninsula to Eucalyptus woodland in the Top End of the Northern Territory ( Andersen et al., 2006) to grasslands on Barrow Island, Western Australia. Most encounters have been from leaf litter samples but one collection involved pitfall traps while another was a queen from a flight intercept trap.

ANIC

Australian National Insect Collection

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Formicidae

Genus

Probolomyrmex

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