Monomorium cyaneum Wheeler HNS

It is not easy to separate M. cyaneum HNS from M. ebeninum HNS and M. depressum HNS. In the syntypes of M. cyaneum HNS examined (LACM) the mesopleuron is smooth, whereas the DuBois (1986) diagnosis and keys indicate punctate mesopleura for the species. There are Mexican workers (LACM) with punctate mesopleura identified as M. cyaneum HNS, but other material referable to this species (Mexico, LACM) lacks this attribute. Perhaps there is variability in the character, but the limited material is insufficient to evaluate this possibility. In M. cyaneum HNS the propodeum is more weakly angled than in the other two species and supposedly there are 8 or fewer hairs on the mesosoma (DuBois, 1986). The pilosity varies somewhat in samples referable to these three species. M. cyaneum HNS and M. depressum HNS share a petiole that is slightly curved in frontal view, as well as a petiolar node that is thicker in lateral view. M. ebeninum HNS has a petiole that is flat or weakly concave in frontal view. Thus the problem is how to separate M. cyaneum HNS and M. depressum HNS. As pointed out above, the punctate sculpturing of the mesopleura does not seem to be universal in cyaneum HNS (three syntypes examined, LACM, do not have appreciable sculpturing on the mesopleura). A characteristic of the syntypes and other specimens (from Hatillo, Mexico, LACM) is the presence of a light metallic blue sheen on the entire body (from which the species name derives). A specimen labeled as cyaneum HNS (LACM) by DuBois has mesopleural sculpturing but does not have the blue sheen.