Adelomyrmex brenesi, John T. LONGINO, 2006

John T. LONGINO, 2006, New species and nomenclatural changes for the Costa Rican ant fauna (Hymenoptera: Formicidae), Myrmecologische Nachrichten 8, pp. 131-143 : 132-133

publication ID

 

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D68781-FFCF-8F11-C985-C6C605BCBB72

treatment provided by

Esperidiao

scientific name

Adelomyrmex brenesi
status

sp. nov.

Adelomyrmex brenesi sp.n. ( Figs. 1 - 3)

Holotype worker: Costa Rica: Heredia Prov., 6 km ENE Vara Blanca (10° 11' N, 84° 07' W), 2000 m elevation, 13. III.2002, leg. Project ALAS, specimen code JTLC00000 3382 ( INBC). GoogleMaps

Paratypes: 4 workers, same data as holotype, specimen codes INB 0003223968 ( MCZC), INB 0003223966 ( LACM), INB 0003223953 ( UCDC), INB 0003223935 ( JTLC). GoogleMaps

Diagnosis of worker: Mandible shining, coarsely striate, with five teeth on masticatory margin, masticatory margin meeting basal margin at obtuse angle, basal margin

with stout triangular tooth at base near mandibular insertion; median lobe of clypeal plate a single blunt projection or slightly emarginate medially; lateral teeth of clypeal plate pronounced, triangular, interlocking with basal mandibular tooth when mandibles closed; anterior and medial face with striae mixed with large, widely-spaced foveae, grading posteriorly to area of large foveae separated by smooth, shiny interspaces, with foveae becoming sparser and smaller toward vertex margin; eye composed of 5 - 12 ommatidia, variably fused; hypostomal margin with small tooth; promesonotum smooth and shiny with sparse, shallow, piligerous foveae; mesopleuron and propodeum with large rugae, rugae widely spaced with smooth and shiny interspaces, rugae on dorsal face and upper half of posterior face of propodeum transverse, lower half of posterior face smooth and shining; promesonotum forming single convexity, dropping step-like to flat dorsal face of propodeum; propodeal spines triangular, acute, about as long as wide; petiolar and postpetiolar dorsa smooth except for piligerous puncta, shining; anteroventral margin of petiole lacking tooth, with at most a narrow longitudinal lamella; anteroventral margin of postpetiole with a strongly projecting transverse flange that appears as an acute tooth in side view; gaster smooth except for piligerous puncta, shining; mandibles, scapes, face, sides of head, femora, tibiae, petiolar and postpetiolar nodes, and gaster covered with abundant, long, subdecumbent pilosity; promesonotum covered with similar but somewhat more erect pilosity; dorsal face of propodeum with two long setae inclined forward, otherwise pilosity sparse; color dark red brown.

Measurements (holotype): HL 0.814, HW 0.698, SL 0.519, MeL 0.822.

Comments: In FERNÁNDEZ (2003) this species keys to A. foveolatus FERNÁNDEZ (in FERNÁNDEZ & MACKAY 2003). It is a large montane version of A. foveolatus , differing in the much larger size and the step-like juncture of promesonotum and propodeum. In A. foveolatus the mesosoma forms a single arched convexity.

Etymology: Named for Danilo Brenes M., Project ALAS Parataxonomist from 1992 to 2006.

Range: Costa Rica.

Biology: This species is a montane endemic, known only from uppermost limits of ant distribution on the Barva Transect in Braulio Carrillo National Park. It is known only from the type specimens, which occurred in four miniWinkler samples (leaf litter sifted from a 1 m 2 forest floor patch) from one of the Project ALAS Winkler transects (http://purl.oclc.org/alas). It appears to be patchy in its local distribution: it occurred in only one of five Winkler transects at the site. Each transect was 250 m long, and the four occurrences of A. brenesi were widely separated along the transect in which it occurred.

INBC

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

INB

INB

MCZC

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

LACM

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

UCDC

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

JTLC

John T. Longino

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Formicidae

Genus

Adelomyrmex

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