Lasius niger (Linnaeus 1758)

Seifert, Bernhard, 2020, A taxonomic revision of the Palaearctic members of the subgenus Lasius s. str. (Hymenoptera, Formicidae), Soil Organisms 92 (1), pp. 15-86 : 63

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.25674/so92iss1pp15

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10871763

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/153287B6-FD0D-FFF2-FF0B-FD735E0AFD44

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Lasius niger (Linnaeus 1758)
status

 

4.4.25 Lasius niger (Linnaeus 1758) View in CoL

Formica nigra Linnaeus 1758 [type investigation]

Type material: Neotype worker plus 2 workers from the neotype nest labelled ”S:B1. Johannishus 1 km NE k:a, RN-03F6f03, 10.08.74, P. Douwes DATA ZOOTAX“; depository ZMLU Lund.

All material examined. A total of 131 nest samples with 281 workers were subject to NUMOBAT investigation. These originated from Algeria (1 sample), Bulgaria (1), Czechia (14), Denmark (2), England (3), Finland (1), France (6), Germany (43), Italy (2), Kazakhstan (10), Kyrgyzstan (7), Mongolia (2), Poland (3), Portugal (1), Russia (15), Slovakia (6), Spain (4), Sweden (8), Turkey (1). For details see supplementary information S1.

Geographic range. Eurosiberian. Originally it was probably a species of the northern steppe zone and the transition zone from steppe to temperate forest but following the spread of human culture there was a strong range expansion even into the Mediterranean   GoogleMaps and S boreal zone. Total   GoogleMaps range from W Europe (10°W) to S Baikal region   GoogleMaps (108°E); going north to 63.6°N along the coast of Norway and to 64.5°N along the Gulf of Bothnia. Due   GoogleMaps to confusion with Lasius grandis , distribution in the Mediterranean region very poorly known, here probably rare and mainly above 700 m but occasionally found in humid coastal lowland habitats and even the town of Alger (here introduced?). In Central Europe planar to subalpine, in the Alps (Vorarlberg) up to 1900 m, in the Tian Shan at 42°N ascending to 2250 m. In SW Siberia a typical and abundant element of humid steppe, of river valleys, and cities.

Diagnosis ( Tab. 6 View Tab , Figs. 49 View Figs –50; key; images in www. AntWeb.org with specimen identifiers CASENT0178773, CASENT0179897, CASENT0179929):

Absolute size rather large (CS 976 µm). Head, scape and maxillary palp length indices, postocular distance and eye size medium (CL/CW 900 1.074, SL/CS 900 0.979, MP6/CS 900 0.180, PoOc/CL 900 0.235, EYE/CS 900 0.245). Number of mandibular dents medium (MaDe 900 8.26). Pubescence on clypeus very dense (sqPDCL 900 3.58). All body parts with numerous standing setae but the length of setae is low (PnHL/CS 900 0.123, GuHL/CS 900 0.094). Coloration: Head, gaster, petiole, coxae, femora and tibiae dark brown; mesosoma dark brown to medium brown with a slight yellowish tinge; mandibles, scape, trochanter and tibio-femoral joint region yellowish-reddish brown.

Biology. See Seifert (2018).

Comments. Lasius niger is an unmistakable combination of very dense clypeal pubescence, numerous setae on all body parts but rather short setae length. It is safely separated from any Palaearctic species by different algorithms of NC-clustering. For separation from Lasius vostochni sp. nov. see below.

ZMLU

Lunds Universitet, Zoologiska Institutionen

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Formicidae

Genus

Lasius

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF