Sifolinia karavajevi, Emery

Collingwood, C. A., 1979, The Formicidae (Hymenoptera) of Fennoscandia and Denmark., Fauna Entomologica Scandinavica 8, pp. 1-174 : 58-59

publication ID

6175

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6283764

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/48D7B1ED-2C79-C7D5-9407-9F83EFE4B411

treatment provided by

Christiana

scientific name

Sifolinia karavajevi
status

 

13. Sifolinia karavajevi   HNS (Arnoldi, 1930)

Figs. 69-71.

Symbiomyrma karavajevi Arnoldi   HNS , 1930:267.

Sifolinia laurae Emery   HNS ; Yarrow, 1968 (misidentification).

Sifolinia karavajevi (Arnoldi)   HNS ; Kutter, 1973:258 (redescription).

Queen. Pale yellowish brown to brownish, appendages pale; antennae with long scape slightly and evenly curved near base, 12 segmented with indeterminate 3-4 segmented club, ultimate funiculus segment x 1 1/2 length of penultimate. Propodeal spines strong and blunt, about as long as space between their tips. Occiput in full dorsal view feebly concave or straight, eyes prominent, ocelli distinct, frons broad. Postpetiole developed ventrally as a blunt forward projecting tooth. Head and alitrunk with shallow rugulose striae and scattered punctures. First gaster tergite with very short scattered decumbent hairs only; head, alitrunk and appendages with suberect hairs which are longer and thicker on antennae. Length: 3.2-3.6 mm.

Male. Pale brown; antennae 12 segmented, scape about as long as 7 following segments, slightly curved near base. Postpetiole with blunt ventral projection; notauli V shaped; propodeum bidentate. Head and mesonotum very shining. Scattered hairs over dorsum of gaster, longer and thicker on head, alitrunk and appendages. Length: 3.5 mm.

Distribution. Sweden: Sk., Krankesjdn (Douwes, 1977). - Norway: HE, Eidskog (Collingwood, 1976). - Finland: Sa, Ryistiina (leg. Forsslund). - England: Dorset, Hampshire, Surrey, very rare. - Range: very local. S. England to Ukraine, Czechoslovakia to Finland.

Biology. This ant has been recorded sometimes in large numbers and sometimes as one or two individuals in nests of various Myrmica   HNS host species including M. rugulosa,   HNS M. scabrinodis   HNS and M. sabuleti   HNS . A colony in Dorset, England, was observed for over 4 years during which time alate queens and males of the parasite were present each season together with workers and worker brood of the host, indicating that egg laying queens of both parasite and Myrmica   HNS host were surviving together in the same nest. In Norway 2 dealate queens were caught in pitfall traps in July 1974 suggesting that after mating, fertilised queens wander over the ground in search of a colony of the host species.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Formicidae

Genus

Sifolinia

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