Crematogaster rochai Forel
publication ID |
20256 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6275046 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/2AB759B1-3F0B-72E9-200D-DEDBA794E567 |
treatment provided by |
Thomas |
scientific name |
Crematogaster rochai Forel |
status |
REVISED STATUS |
Crematogaster rochai Forel HNS 1903 REVISED STATUS
Crematogaster rochai Forel HNS , 1903:255. Syntype worker, queen, male: Brazil, Ceara (Diaz da Rocha) [ MHNG] (examined). Emery, 1922:134: combination in C. (Orthocrema) HNS . Forel, 1912:213; Gallardo, 1934:21: race/subspecies of brevispinosa HNS .
Range
Widespread in Neotropics from southern Mexico to Argentina.
Description of worker (Costa Rica)
Differing from crinosa HNS and torosa HNS by the following combination of characters: dorsal and posterior face of propodeum in nearly the same plane, such that the propodeal suture appears very shallow with no posterior wall, the propodeum forming a single declivity from the propodeal suture to the petiolar insertion (very large workers have a short dorsal face that drops to propodeal suture); promesonotum strongly arched, not flattened; anteroventral petiolar tooth long, sharply acute, triangular to spine-like; fourth abdominal tergite completely lacking erect setae.
Measurements
HL 0.851, 0.519, 1.139; HW 0.915, 0.535, 1.238; HC 0.905, 0.509, 1.207; SL 0.559, 0.375, 0.681; EL 0.198, 0.114, 0.257; A11L 0.247; A11W 0.123; A10L 0.110; A10W 0.104; A09L 0.062; A09W 0.078; A08L 0.045; A08W 0.060; WL 0.913, 0.500, 1.259; SPL 0.098, 0.069, 0.158; PTH 0.200, 0.121, 0.265; PTL 0.271, 0.158, 0.407; PTW 0.279, 0.166, 0.343; PPL 0.232, 0.128, 0.286; PPW 0.262, 0.167, 0.352; CI 108, 103, 109; OI 23, 22, 23; SI 66, 72, 60; PTHI 74, 77, 65; PTWI 103, 105, 84; PPI 113, 130, 123; SPI 11, 14, 13; ACI 0.57.
Queen (Costa Rica)
A normal queen (dorsal face of propodeum drops steeply from postscutellum and much of propodeum appears ventral to scutellum and postscutellum, Fig. 1) with general shape, sculpture, and pilosity characters of the worker; size characters as in Figures 4 and 5.
Biology
Crematogaster rochai HNS has a biology very similar to crinosa HNS and torosa HNS . It occurs primarily in open, seasonally dry areas, highly disturbed areas, pasture edges, and beach margins. It occasionally occurs in mangroves, although crinosa HNS is the more common mangrove inhabitant. I have never collected it in rainforest areas.
Nests are large, polydomous, and distributed in a wide variety of plant cavities. Dead branches and knots in living trees are most often used. In Guanacaste Province in Costa Rica colonies may occupy ant acacias and may invade acacias occupied by Pseudomyrmex HNS . I have seen workers distributed in small chambers scattered in the corky bark of Tabebuia trees (Bignoniaceae) and Erythrina trees (Fabaceae). Workers often construct small carton baffles to restrict nest entrances and small carton pavilions that shelter Homoptera on surrounding vegetation.
Foraging is primarily diurnal. Workers are generalized scavengers and they frequently visit extrafloral nectaries. Often columns of workers move between nests.
I often find cockroach egg cases scattered in the nest chambers of C. rochai HNS , at a much higher density than in the environment generally. The nature of the relationship between cockroaches and the crinosa HNS group would be worth investigation.
Comments
This is a member of the crinosa HNS complex and may not always be distinguishable from crinosa HNS and torosa HNS . See under crinosa HNS for further discussion. In Costa Rica rochai HNS always has the fourth abdominal tergite completely devoid of erect setae, and the anteroventral petiolar process is long and sharp. Costa Rican material also lacks a differentiated dorsal face of the propodeum, but material from central and southern South America develops a stronger propodeal suture, thus approaching the condition in other crinosa HNS group material. Also, southern material often has one to five erect setae on the anterolateral portions of the fourth abdominal tergite.
MHNG |
Switzerland, Geneva, Museum d'Histoire Naturelle |
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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Myrmicinae |
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