Cyphomyrmex daguerrei Santschi
publication ID |
4576 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6285126 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/24390F39-C252-DABF-85B0-A8C1B7616CC7 |
treatment provided by |
Christiana |
scientific name |
Cyphomyrmex daguerrei Santschi |
status |
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8. Cyphomyrmex daguerrei Santschi View in CoL HNS
(Figs. 8, 22, 34, 50)
Cyphomyrmex daguerrei Santschi HNS , 1933: 118-119 (Worker; Argentina, Buenos Aires: Rosas, F. C. Sud). - Weber, 1940: 413 (Key). - Kusnezov, 1949: 437, 449- 450 (Key).
Types. - 3 workers collected by J. B. Daguerre, n. 1903-667. Two workers examined (lectotype and paratype NHMB and WWK) received from Santschi collection.
Worker. (Lectotype). - Total length 3.4 mm; head length 0.80 mm; head width 0.75 mm; maximum diameter of eyes 0.13 mm; scape length 0.67 mm; thorax length 1.01 mm; hind femur length 0.85 mm. Medium brown; dorsum of head, postpetiole and gaster infuscated. Opaque; finely reticulatepunctate; antennal scrobe reticulate-punctate, slightly shining; front reticulate-rugose; postpetiole and gaster with dense larger shallow foveolae. The whole insect covered with whitish, fine, decumbent, scattered and glittering hairs, becoming subdecumbent or recurved on head and gaster. Tip of gaster with the usual dense fringe of short erect hairs.
Head as shown in Fig. 8. Mandibles finely punctate and vestigially striolate; chewing border with 8 teeth, gradually diminishing in size toward base. Clypeus with anterior border convex and projecting, noticeably excised in middle; lateral denticle at origin of frontal carinae at best vestigial. Frontal area distinct, longer than broad. Frontal carinae with moderately expanded frontal lobes, somewhat diverging caudad and feebly sinuous after constriction. Preocular carinae reaching occipital corner (Fig. 50), completely closing the antennal scrobe. Occiput broadly and shallowly excised with another narrower and deeper median excision, between distinct carinae of vertex. Supraocular tumulus blunt but prominent. Scapes in repose surpassing marked occipital corners by a distance equalling their apical width. Funicular segments 1I-IV a little longer than broad, V-VII about as broad as long.
Thorax as shown in Fig. 22. Pronotum with a pair of projecting and conical tubercles on each side; midpronotal tubercle well-developed, but rather blunt; anteroinferior corner with an obliquely truncate foliaceous tooth. Mesonotum with 2 pairs of longitudinal ridges, appearing in side view as obtuse, low triangular teeth; area between ridges flattened to slightly excavate. Mesoepinotal groove deeply impressed. Basal face of epinotum laterally weakly marginate, posteriorly with a pair of small pointed teeth. Hind femora simple, not dilated nor longitudinally crested ventrally on basal third.
Pedicel as shown in Figs. 22 and 34. Petiolar node broader than long, slightly broader with rounded corners in front; anterior face distinct from dorsal face, the latter delimited laterally by longitudinal carinules and posteriorly by a slightly raised transverse laminule. Postpetiole subtrapezoidal, somewhat broader than long, (11:9), dorsum with a deep longitudinal furrow, postero-lateral corners narrowly foliaceous and not appressed to sternum. First tergite of gaster with shallow, mid-dorsal longitudinal furrow in front; lateral borders submarginate on anterior two thirds.
The paratype worker has the following measurements; head length 0.83 mm; head width 0.75 mm; scape length 0.72 mm; thorax length 1.07 mm; hind femur length 0.85 mm. It is otherwise completely identical with lectotype. The denticle at origin of frontal carinae is still weaker, nearly obsolete. Figures based on paratype specimen, deposited in my collection (WWK).
No other specimens known.
Discussion. - When describing daguerrei, Santschi HNS compared it with morschi HNS . There is, indeed, a certain resemblance, evident principally in the following characters: Scape long, well projecting beyond occipital lobes or corners; hind femora slender, not dilated nor visibly carinate ventrally at basal third, their length exceeding the head length; clypeal teeth feebly if at all developed. These characters likewise separate daguerrei HNS from the remaining forms of the olitor-subgroup. A few stray specimens from southeastern Brazil, which 1 provisionally associate with olitor HNS (cf. below) approach daguerrei HNS rather closely, except for the just mentioned critical characters, and the evenly rounded frontal lobes, the subparallel frontal carinae.
On the other hand, the deeply notched anterior border of clypeus, the mote distinctly circumscribed antennal scrobe, the marked occipital angles, the better developed thoracic tubercles, the steeper face of epinotum, the shorter and broader postpetiole with more strongly diverging sides in full-face view, are useful features for distinguishing daguerrei HNS from morschi HNS .
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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