| The Ants of Africa SUBFAMILY PONERINAE - Genus Anochetus |
|
| Contents - Ponerinae - PONERINAE Introduction |
In Tribe PONERINI
Diagnostic Features - Similar to Odontomachus but with the apical mandibular armament with the dorsalmost tooth acute and the petiolar node not ending dorsally in a spine. See Brown (1978c).
Anochetus Mayr (1861: 53; type species Odontomachus ghiliani Spinola, 1851b: 55, type location Morocco, by monotypy); junior synonym Stenomyrmex Mayr (1862: 711; type species Myrmecia emarginata, by subsequent designation of Wheeler (1911f: 173; type location Central America); synonymy by Brown (1978c: 552).
Mayr's (1861) genus description is at
;
and his (1896) definiton of the male at
.
Brown (1978c) revised the genus and I have followed his synonymies and
so-on. The revision is poor on descriptions, etc., and leaves much to be
desired. For instance, one gets the impression that he paid little
attention to the work of Bernard (1952). What little is known of their
general biology was summarised by Brown (1978c). The colony size is of the
order of 100 individuals, usually in cryptic sites - rotten or hollow
twigs, under bark, etc. Some including pellucidus and fulginosus
apparently are more or less arboreal. Most forage after dark, often
widely, and all certainly are predaceous. If attacked their general
response is to feign death. Probably all are predaceous, utilising a
trap-jaw mechanism to seize prey and to "jump" backwards. Brown
(1976) regarded the genus as most likely having its origin in the Old
World wet tropics, with arid-country species restricted to that global
area. Brown's key is at
.
Key to species of Africa
Developed from Brown (1978c); note CI = 100 X HW/HL but in my experience
it is not a reliable index; HL in the key includes mandibles.
| 1 | In
full face view, antennal scapes fail to reach posterior margin of
occipital lobes, eyes < 0.15 mm |
2 |
| -- | In
full face view antennal scapes extend beyond posterior margins of
occipital lobes and/or compound eyes > 0.15 mm long |
6 |
| 2 | Petiole node in lateral view quite thick with near parallel sides; TL 3.5-3.9 mm; slightly reddish-yellow | South Africa - talpa |
| -- | Petiole
node in lateral view strongly tapered from bottom to top |
3 |
| 3 | Petiolar node in lateral view with apex narrowly rounded (as preceding), puncturation of first gastric tergum fine and inconspicuous | 4 |
| -- | Petiolar
node in lateral view tapered to a sharp apex, puncturation of first
gastric tergum usually coarse and conspicuous |
5 |
| 4 | HL
(including mandibles) > 1.50 mm; petiole in anterior view with narrow
rounded apex; TL 4.5-4.8 mm; yellowish brown, alitrunk, antennae and
mandibles reddish brown |
South Africa - jonesi |
| -- | HL
(including mandibles) < 1.50 mm; petiole in anterior view with wide
rounded apex; TL 3.7-3.8 mm; reddish-yellow, shiny |
. |
| . | ![]() |
South Africa - punctaticeps |
| 5 | Eyes
reduced to dots 0.10 mm or less in greatest diameter, filling half or
less of the length of the orbital fossa; mesonotal disc straplike, about
three times as wide as long; TL 3.9-4.4 mm; colour clear yellow |
. |
| . | ![]() |
West Africa & Gabon - siphneus |
| -- | Eyes
usually larger (0.07-0.12 mm long) filling more than half the length of
the orbital fossa; mesonotum < 2.5 times as wide as long; TL 3.3-3.5
mm; colour brownish-yellow to dark brown, head often lighter |
. |
| . | ![]() |
Pan-African - katonae |
| relatively long antennal scapes and larger eyes | -- | |
| 6 | Upper
surfaces of body with conspicuous uniform appressed or subappressed
pubescence; standing hairs absent or extremely sparse |
7 |
| -- | Upper surfaces of body with little or no appressed pubescence, standing hairs usually more abundant | 9 |
| 7 | Small,
HL < 1.9 mm, with reduced eyes; petiole node a narrow tapering scale
in lateral view; Tl 4.9 mm; castaneous, gaster darker |
. |
| . | ![]() |
eastern Africa - pubescens |
| -- | Larger,
HL > 1.9 mm, large eyes; petiole node a thick scale in lateral view |
8 |
| 8 | First
tergite of gaster and most of rest of body smooth and shining; TL
6.0-6.5 mm; dull ferruginous, gaster darker |
northern savannah - sedilloti |
| -- | First
tergite of gaster with rugulose sculpture, rest of body dull, much
striated; TL 5.2-6.0 mm; mostly rich dark red, gaster with basal segment
castaneous and rest piceous to black |
east and southern Africa - levaillanti |
| Generally lacking pubescence | -- | |
| 9 | Frontal
striation of head distinct, prevailingly longitudinal and continuous to
or very nearly to the nuchal carina in the middle |
10 |
| -- | Frontal
longitudinal striation of head not reaching nearly to nuchal carina, the
vertex largely smooth and shining |
15 |
| 10 | Gastric terga I and II completely glassy smooth and shining, only scattered puncturation; frontal striation always fine, seven or more striae/0.1 mm transect; head broad CI > 87 | 11 |
| -- | Gastric terga I and II with some reticulate, rugulose or dense punctulate sculpture; frontal striation of head coarse or fine, head varying in width, CI 80-89 | 13 |
| 11 | Dorsum
of pronotum smooth and shiny; black with head and appendages reddish |
. |
| . | ![]() |
East & Central Africa - obscuratus |
| -- | Dorsum of pronotum sculptured | 12 |
| 12 | Dorsal
alitrunk with variable moderate sculpturation; eyes 0.18-0.26 mm long;
TL 5.7 mm; castaneous but legs yellow |
West Africa & Congo Basin, east into Uganda forests - africanus |
| . | ![]() |
|
| -- | Dorsal
alitrunk with fine superficial striation, pronotum near smooth; eye
0.27-0.28; TL 5.9 mm; head dark reddish-amber, alitrunk and gaster
castaneous brown, legs paler |
South Africa - natalensis |
| 13 | Frontal
striation of vertex fine and regular; head more or less red in colour,
body darker; TL West Africa 4.6 mm, TL South Africa 5.3-5.5 mm |
. |
| . | ![]() |
West Africa & Congo Basin - bequaerti |
| -- | Frontal
striation usually coarse and uneven; head and body concolorous |
14 |
| 14 | Colour
black or piceous, with brownish-yellow mandibles, antennae and tarsi;
propodeum rugulose; TL ca 6.0 mm |
pan-African - fuliginosus |
| -- | Colour
tawny-yellow, with lighter appendages, having a somewhat translucent
appearance; propodeum usually densely punctate, opaque; rarely partly
rugulose; TL ca 5.0 mm |
. |
| . | ![]() |
West Africa & Congo Basin - pellucidus |
| --Head with short or no longitudinal striation | -- | |
| 15 | Petiole
elongate, with bidentate summit; TL 10 mm; pale to reddish pale brown |
. |
| . | ![]() |
South Africa - faurei |
| -- | Petiole summit unarmed | 16 |
| 16 | Petiole
node in lateral view thick with rounded apex; eye > 0.35 mm long; TL
8.3-9.1 mm; dull brownish yellow |
. |
| . | ![]() |
Angola - angolensis |
| -- | Petiole node compressed with level apex; eyes < 0.35 mm long | 17 |
| 17 | Propodeum entirely smooth and shining; TL 7.0-7.3 mm; pale brownish or yellowish red, appendages yellowish | North-east Africa - rothschildi |
| -- | Propodeum sculptured | 18 |
| 18 | Petiole
node in profile peg-like, anterior slope rounded, summit bluntly
rounded, seen from above lunate, mostly dull yellow, trunk darker |
. |
| . | ![]() |
West Africa & Congo Basin - maynei |
| -- | Petiole
node variable, anterior slope usually convex or straight, or if slightly
concave summit strongly tapered; TL 6.8 mm; brownish red-gold |
. |
| . | ![]() |
pan-African - traegaordhi |
Anochetus new speciesFour specimens were found in two leaf litter samples from logged sites at Atewa Forest Reserve, Ghana (Belshaw & Bolton, 1994b). |
| PONERINAE Introduction | © 2007, 2008 - Brian Taylor CBiol
FIBiol FRES 11, Grazingfield, Wilford, Nottingham, NG11 7FN, U.K. |
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