Camponotus aureopilus

Shattuck, S. O., 2005, Review of the Camponotus aureopilus species-group (Hymenoptera, Formicidae), including a second Camponotus with a metapleural gland., Zootaxa 903, pp. 1-20 : 1-2

publication ID

20438

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A9753CF6-9186-4039-8401-8533855C9158

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6267074

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D7082CAD-B98B-6A8E-57F3-3B5316291C27

treatment provided by

Christiana

scientific name

Camponotus aureopilus
status

 

[[ Camponotus aureopilus View in CoL   HNS species-group ]]

Camponotus   HNS is the world's largest and most widespread ant genus. It contains over 1500 described species and subspecies (Bolton 1995) and occurs in essentially all terrestrial habitats where ants are found. Individual species range in size from moderately small to large, and from highly abundant and visible to rare and cryptic. The genus is certainly one of nature's great success stories.

The species examined here form a small group of distinctive species limited to Papua New Guinea and neighboring Queensland, Australia. They share a number of characters (see below) suggesting a close relationship, and one of them ( C. thadeus   HNS , new species) is only the second species in the genus with a metapleural gland. This gland, one of the autapomorphies uniting the family Formicidae, has been lost in a handful of genera (Bolton 2003) including all but two known species of Camponotus   HNS ( C. gigas   HNS and C. thadeus   HNS ). While C. gigas   HNS is morphologically unusual for the genus (and is currently placed in the monotypic subgenus Dinomyrmex   HNS (Bolton 1995)), C. thadeus   HNS is very similar to the other species considered here, suggesting an independent reversal in the loss of this gland. Clearly a detailed phylogenetic analysis will be required to address this hypothesis critically, an undertaking well outside the current study.

These appear to be rare ants with most species known from very limited material or occurring in very limited geographic areas (in the case of C. thadeus   HNS ). This currently restricts our ability to assess intraspecific variation as would be possible if additional material were available. However, the characters used in this study are based on those found to be useful in recognizing species of this genus occurring in Australia where extensive collections have been made and intraspecific versus interspecific variation can be assessed in detail (for example, Shattuck and McArthur 2002). A conservative approach has also been taken, with "solid" differences needed for species recognition. It is hoped that these factors will combine to provide a solid foundation for the taxonomy of these ants. Having said that, it is extremely likely that this study represents only a small fraction of the taxa occurring in this species-group and additional collecting in Papua New Guinea and eastern Indonesia will undoubtedly reveal many more species.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Formicidae

Genus

Camponotus

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