Pheidole magna Eguchi

Eguchi, K., 2008, A revision of Northern Vietnamese species of the ant genus Pheidole (Insecta: Hymenoptera: Formicidae: Myrmicinae)., Zootaxa 1902, pp. 1-118 : 52-55

publication ID

22171

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6230476

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E4988AF4-87B4-8235-54E7-54764D62FB69

treatment provided by

Christiana

scientific name

Pheidole magna Eguchi
status

 

Pheidole magna Eguchi   HNS

Figs. 14a-g

Pheidole magna Eguchi   HNS , 2006: 125-127. Holotype: major, "Bang Khoang (Site-A: ca. 1700-1800 m alt.), Sa Pa, Lao Cai, Vietnam, Eg02-VN-137", IEBR, examined; paratypes: 34 majors & 35 minors, same data as holotype, BMNH, FSKU, IEBR, MHNG, MCZC & ACEG, examined.

Pheidole   HNS sp. eg-162. Bui & Eguchi 2003: 9 (checklist), Eguchi, Bui et al. 2005: 91 (checklist).

Other material examined: Vietnam: Lao Cai: Sa Pa town [Eg02-VN-087], Bang Khoang (Site-A: a stream-side secondary forest), 1700-1800 m alt., Sa Pa [Eg02-VN-116, -124, -129], Bang Khoang (Site-B: a well-developed forest), ca. 1700 m alt. [Eg02-VN-165, -169, -175], Sa Seng (small fragment of limestone forest), Sa Pa [Eg02-VN-280]; Ha Tay: Ba Vi N.P. [T.V. Bui]. Eguchi's informal species code " Pheidole   HNS sp. eg- 162" has been applied to these specimens.

Worker measurements & indices: Major (data from the original description). - HL 2.21-2.39 mm; HW 2.13-2.32 mm; CI 92-99; SL 1.04-1.14 mm; SI 45-51; FL 1.59-1.66 mm; FI 70-75.

Minor (data from the original description). - HL 0.87-0.94 mm; HW 0.79-0.90 mm; CI 91-96; SL 0.94- 1.03 mm; SI 113-122; FL 1.12-1.22 mm; FI 134-143.

Worker description

Major. - Head in lateral view not or very weakly impressed on vertex; frons and vertex longitudinallyobliquely rugose; vertexal lobe largely smooth and shining; frontal carina and antennal scrobe absent; clypeus with a median longitudinal carina which is sometimes reduced into a weak rugula; hypostoma with a low or inconspicuous median and moderately to strongly developed submedian processes; lateral processes present but reduced, much smaller than submedian processes; antenna with a 3-segmented club; maximal diameter of eye a little longer than antennal segment X. Promesonotal dome with a conspicuous prominence on its posterior slope; humerus not or very weakly produced laterad; the dome at the humeri narrower than at the bottom; propodeal spine small. Petiole almost as long as postpetiole (excluding helcium); postpetiole relatively massive. First gastral tergite smooth and shining, often with a weakly punctured area just around its articulation with postpetiole.

Minor. - Head smooth and shining; preoccipital carina complete but weak dorsally; median part of clypeus smooth and shining, with a median longitudinal carina in its anterior half; antenna with a 3-segmented club; scape extending far beyond posterolateral margin of head; maximal diameter of eye shorter than antennal segment X. Promesonotal dome smooth and shining, in lateral view raised relatively highly in front of a conspicuous prominence/mound on its posterior slope; humerus in dorso-oblique view not produced, or very weakly produced; mesopleuron, metapleuron and lateral face of propodeum largely punctured weakly. Petiole almost as long as or a little shorter than postpetiole (excluding helcium); postpetiole massive.

Recognition: This species is characterized among Indo-Chinese species by the combination of the following features: in the major vertexal lobe largely smooth and shining; in the major and minor promesonotal dome having a conspicuous prominence on its posterior slope; in the major and minor postpetiole relatively massive. This large-bodied species is similar to Pheidole dugasi Forel   HNS , but well distinguished from the latter which has the following characteristics in the major: dorsum of vertexal lobes distinctly rugose; first gastral tergite entirely rugoso-punctured (see also Eguchi 2006).

Distribution & bionomics: Known from N. Vietnam. This species occurs from relatively open habitats to forests at relatively high altitude (1000 m alt. or higher), and nests in the soil and rotting logs (Eguchi 2006). Majors serve as repletes (e.g., the type series, Eg02-VN-280).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Formicidae

SubFamily

Myrmicinae

Genus

Pheidole

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF