Bothriomyrmex paradoxus Dubovikov and Longino, 2004

Dubovikov, D. A. & Longino, J. T., 2004, A new species of the genus Bothriomyrmex Emery, 1869 (Hymenoptera: Formicidae: Dolichoderinae) from Costa Rica., Zootaxa 776, pp. 1-10 : 3-8

publication ID

20352

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6270295

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5E5652E9-7621-4BEE-8A62-BA6DD13B2B9C

treatment provided by

Thomas

scientific name

Bothriomyrmex paradoxus Dubovikov and Longino
status

sp. nov.

Bothriomyrmex paradoxus Dubovikov and Longino   HNS , sp. nov.

Figures 1-5

Holotype queen: Costa Rica, Prov. Guanacaste, Guanacaste Conservation Area, Estacion Cacao , 10°55'N 85°30'W, 1100m , 22 Feb 2003, tropical montane moist forest , sweep sample (J. S. Noyes), specimen barcode JTLC000004280 [ INBio]. GoogleMaps

Paratypes: 3 queens and 3 males, same data as holotype [ ZIN]; GoogleMaps queen and 2 males, same data as holotype [ MCZC]; GoogleMaps 2 queens, same data as holotype [ LACM, INBio]; GoogleMaps 5 workers, Costa Rica, Prov. Heredia, 11 km SE La Virgen , 10º20´N 84º04´W, 500m , 19 Apr 2003, coll. R. Vargas C., 05-RVC-007 [ ZIN]; GoogleMaps 4 workers, same data [ MHNG]; GoogleMaps 5 workers, same data but 16 Feb 2003, coll. J. Longino ( JTL4938 ) [same colony] [ CAS, INBio, LACM, UCDC, USNM] GoogleMaps .

Holotype measurements: HL 0.600; HW 0.526; SL 0.424; TL 0.697; TH 0.448; PH 0.227; TI 0.643; CI 0.876; SI 0.706.

Paratype measurements (average for 3 queens): HL 0.600; HW 0.543; SL 0.436; TL 0.700; TH 0.450; PH 0.257; TI 0.643; CI 0.905; SI 0.726.

Paratype measurements (average for 5 workers): HL 0.586; HW 0.520; SL 0.434; PH 0.239; CI 0.888; SI 0.742.

Paratype measurements (average for 3 males): HL 0.457; HW 0.479; SL 0.257; OL 0.171; PH 0.179; OI 0.667; CI 1.047; SI 0.563.

Etymology: named for the paradoxical occurrence of this species in the New World, when the genus was previously considered strictly Old World.

Diagnosis: Queen with short suberect setae on mesosoma and gaster; queen mesosoma short and high (TI> 0.64); worker mesosoma with impressed metanotal groove.

Description (queen): Palp formula 4:3; head oblong, with rounded posterolateral vertex margins; suberect hairs of variable length on genae (Fig. 2a); clypeus broad, width in center 0.2 mm (average for 4 queens), with curved setae on anterior margin; mandible long, with outer and basal margin subparallel, masticatory margin with three teeth and 4- 5 denticles; mesosoma short and high, with erect setae on dorsum and posterior face of propodeum; wings with closed cubital and radial cells (Fig. 1c); petiole with strongly developed ventral lobe, dorsal scale inclined anteriorly; gaster with many long setae on posterolateral margins of tergites; body dark brown; entire body with short suberect pubescence, distance between hairs subequal to length.

Description (worker): Palp formula 4:3; medial hypostoma absent (Fig. 3d); head with two long setae on the frons, two on the posterior clypeal margin, and many curved setae on the anterior clypeal margin; metanotal groove impressed (Fig. 3a); dorsal face of propodeum rounded, much shorter than posterior face; petiolar node scale-like, tall, inclined anteriorly; ventral margin of petiole with prominent lobe (Fig. 3c); gaster with long setae on posterior margins of tergites; pubescence short and dense over entire body; body dark brown, with lighter antennae and legs.

Description (male): Scape long, projecting beyond outer eye margin (in face view) by about half of its length; propodeum rounded, without differentiated dorsal and posterior faces; petiole with short anterior peduncle; petiolar node low, thin, vertical; ventral margin of petiole with small anterior denticle and strongly developed medial lobe (Fig. 4); sagitta thin, with apex weakly folded down.

Description (larva): Body with two protuberances on the prothorax, located ventrolaterally; hairs short; eight pairs of spiracles (Fig. 5).

Biology: Bothriomyrmex paradoxus   HNS is known from two different collections from widely separated localities in Costa Rica (Fig. 1). One collection was made in February 2003, during the Project ALAS expeditions to the 500m site on the Volcan Barva transect. The expeditions were based at the "El Ceibo" guard station, on the west bank of the Rio Peje. The station building itself is in pasture abutting mature rainforest. A few meters inside the forest a large tree had fallen sometime during the months prior to the expeditions. A few of the tree's leaves were still green; most were brown but still attached to branches. There were still extensive epiphyte mats covering the trunk and major branches. Longino collected from beneath these mats and found Bothriomyrmex   HNS workers and brood piles to be abundant beneath most of the mats. Large Margarodidae (Hemiptera, Coccoidea) were also scattered amongst the Bothriomyrmex   HNS . Other ant species occurred under the mats and were somewhat interdigitated with the Bothriomyrmex   HNS , although much less abundant. These included Hypoponera opacior   HNS , a small yellow Solenopsis   HNS , and Tapinoma   HNS . Smaller nests or aggregations were also found of Crematogaster sotobosque   HNS and Pheidole biconstricta   HNS . One part of the tree, near the pasture edge, was being invaded by Solenopsis geminata   HNS . I found only workers and brood. Ronald Vargas of Project ALAS collected more from the same tree in April. His collections included two adult males.

The second collection was also made in February of 2003. John Noyes of The Natural History Museum (London) was taking large sweep samples from vegetation at several Costa Rican localities and extracting Encyrtidae, his primary focal taxon. He also separated ants and sent these samples to Longino. Each sample contained hundreds to thousands of ants, including many alates. In the sample from Estación Cacao were about a dozen males and a similar number of dealate queens of Bothriomyrmex   HNS . The habitat at Estacion Cacao is a mosaic of mature montane moist forest with epiphyte-laden trees and abandoned pastures. This is a site on the Pacific slope of the northern-most cordillera in Costa Rica, 170km from the El Ceibo site on the Atlantic slope.

Comments: Although it is typical to choose workers as holotypes of ant species, we have chosen a queen because queens exhibit much greater morphological differences among species in Bothriomyrmex   HNS . This is true of several dolichoderine genera, including Azteca   HNS and Tapinoma   HNS . For example, Longino (1991) used queens as holotypes in taxonomic work on Azteca   HNS .

The new species undoubtedly belongs to the genus Bothriomyrmex   HNS . It has all the traits typical of the genus: 4:3 palp formula, strongly reduced hypostomal margin, and a characteristic venation on the forewing of the queen (closed discoidal cell, RM-2 absent, and radius reaching costal margin of wing). The systematics of the genus Bothriomyrmex   HNS are complex, and the previous classification (Dubovikoff, 2002) is not complete. Bothriomymex paradoxus   HNS belongs to Bothriomyrmex   HNS s.s. and not among the Asian and Australian species (Dubovikoff unpub.). However, it does not fit cleanly into one of the Palearctic species groups. The short suberect setae on the queen's mesosoma and gaster is a trait also found in members of the B. syrius   HNS group ( B. syrius Forel   HNS , B. turcomenicus Emery   HNS , B. communistus Santschi   HNS , B. kusnezovi Emery   HNS and B. urartus Dubovikoff   HNS ). However, B. paradoxus   HNS differs from all species of this group by the higher and shorter mesosoma of the queen. TI of B. paradoxus   HNS is 0.64, while other species have TI <0.50. Also, the impressed metanotal groove on the worker is a trait found in members of the B. gibbus   HNS complex and not in the B. syrius   HNS group.

Discussion

This is the first collection of the genus Bothriomyrmex   HNS in the New World. The occurrence in mature forest habitats and the fact that it is not conspecific with any known Old World species suggest it is truly native and not a recent introduction. Bothriomyrmex paradoxus   HNS may be a very old species, long isolated from the Palearctic species. Other putative relict species in Central America include Technomyrmex fulvus (Wheeler   HNS 1934) and Perissomyrmex snyderi (Longino and Hartley   HNS 1995). Central America appears to be a refuge for several ancient lineages of ants.

In the Palearctic, Bothriomyrmex   HNS s. s. are temporary social parasites of monogynous Tapinoma   HNS . It is unknown whether B. paradoxus   HNS is also a temporary social parasite of Tapinoma   HNS . Given its geographic isolation, elucidating the nest foundation behavior of B. paradoxus   HNS would be particularly valuable.

INBio

Costa Rica, Santo Domingo de Heredia, Instituto Nacional de Biodiversidad (INBio)

ZIN

Russia, St. Petersburg, Russian Academy of Sciences, Zoological Institute

MCZC

USA, Massachusetts, Cambridge, Harvard University, Museum of Comparative Zoology

LACM

USA, California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles County Museum of Natural History

MHNG

Switzerland, Geneva, Museum d'Histoire Naturelle

CAS

USA, California, San Francisco, California Academy of Sciences

UCDC

USA, California, Davis, University of California, R.M. Bohart Museum of Entomology

USNM

USA, Washington D.C., National Museum of Natural History, [formerly, United States National Museum]

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Formicidae

Genus

Bothriomyrmex

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