Pheidole depressinoda, Longino, 2019

Longino, John T., 2019, Pheidole (Hymenoptera, Formicidae) of Middle American Wet Forest, Zootaxa 4599 (1), pp. 1-126 : 33

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4599.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:7CDD24FF-5BA3-4D06-898D-A3E220515D4C

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5B56E872-FFA0-4A6B-FF32-8A22FA8EE85E

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Pheidole depressinoda
status

sp. nov.

Pheidole depressinoda View in CoL new species

( Plate 5 View PLATE 5 )

Pheidole JTL-190: morphospecies code previously used on AntWeb.

HOLOTYPE: 1 major worker, Guatemala, Petén: Cerro Cahuí , 17.00203 -89.70922 ± 153 m, 155 m, 24-May- 2009, tropical moist forest, at bait (LLAMA, Ba-B- 05-3-04-19) [ MCZC, unique specimen identifier CASENT0611611] . PARATYPES: major, minor workers, male: same data as holotype [ MCZC, USNM]; same data except 16.99876 -89.71038 ± 206 m, 150 m (Ba-B- 05-3-03-01) [ DZUP, JTLC, UVGC]; 17.00222 -89.71709 ± 57 m, 150 m, nest in dead stick (J. Longino, JTL6677) [ CAS, JTLC] .

Geographic range. Guatemala.

Diagnosis. Minor: face largely smooth and shining, with foveolate sculpture between eye and antennal fossa, very faint traces of foveolate sculpture elsewhere; promesonotal groove absent; side of mesosoma and dorsal face of propodeum foveolate (side of pronotum with variable presence of a smooth patch), promesonotal dorsum smooth and shiny; propodeal spines about one third length of posterior face of propodeum; postpetiole longer and broader than petiolar node, but dorsoventrally depressed, lower than petiolar node in profile (typical postpetiolar shape of P. punctatissima and relatives); gaster mostly smooth and shining, with very small area of shagreening near postpetiolar insertion; face, mesosoma, and gaster with short, stiff, erect dorsal setae, tibiae lack erect setae; color distinctively bicolored; head, mesosoma, gaster, and forecoxae dark brown, antennal scapes, middle and hind coxae, tibiae and tarsi contrasting light ivory color, femora darker, but lighter than main body. Major: inner hypostomal teeth distinct, closely spaced; scape base terete; face with shallow antennal scrobes, not distinctly delimited, scrobe surface foveolate; face mostly foveolate, stronger anteriorly, fading posteriorly, vertex lobes smooth and shiny, foveolation overlain with longitudinal rugulae on anterior half of head, ventral to scrobe and in medial space between frontal carinae; propodeal spines about one third length of posterior face of propodeum; gastral dorsum with faint shagreening on anterior third, smooth and shining elsewhere; sides of head, mesosomal dorsum, and gastral dorsum with abundant short erect setae, tibiae with no erect setae or with 1-2 inconspicuous setae.

Measurements, minor worker: HW 0.39, HL 0.46, SL 0.43, EL 0.10, WL 0.50, PSL 0.04, PTW 0.07, PPW 0.14, CI 85, SI 110, PSLI 9, PPI 194 (n=2).

Measurements, major worker: HW 0.83, HL 0.96, SL 0.47, EL 0.12, WL 0.76, PSL 0.06, PTW 0.13, PPW 0.28, CI 86, SI 56, PSLI 7, PPI 212 (n=2).

Biology. This species is known from one site, a reserve with somewhat seasonal moist forest. Minor and major workers recruit to ground baits. Workers occur in Winkler samples of sifted litter and rotten wood. A nest was discovered by following workers from a bait to a soft rotten stick in the litter.

Comments. DNA sequence data place this species near P. bilimeki and P. punctatissima ( Economo et al. 2019, as JTL190) (note that " floridana " in Economo et al. is the Florida population of P. bilimeki , see Sarnat et al. 2015). The broad, depressed postpetiole is typical of this complex, which includes P. anastasii , P. bilimeki , and P. punctatissima . However, the sculpture and color are unusual. Most members of the group are uniformly foveolate on the face and mesosoma, in contrast to the extensive smooth areas on this species. The contrasting brown and white coloration is also distinctive. Both these characters are convergent with the superficially similar but unrelated species P. albipes , which is also common at the type locality. This may be some form of local mimicry.

Etymology: Referring to the depressed postpetiole which is characteristic of P. punctatissima and relatives.

USNM

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

DZUP

Universidade Federal do Parana, Colecao de Entomologia Pe. Jesus Santiago Moure

UVGC

Collecion de Artropodos

CAS

California Academy of Sciences

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Formicidae

Genus

Pheidole

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