Camponotus (Myrmopelta) vividus (F.Smith)
Type location Sierra Leone (Formica vivida,F.
Smith, 1858b: 31, worker) collected by D.F. Morgan; subspecies
cato (Forel, 1913b: 346, soldier & worker) and semidepilis
(Wheeler, 1922: 248, soldier & worker) from Zaïre,
meinerti (Forel, 1886f: 189, soldier, worker & queen)
and reginae (Forel, 1901d: 307, soldier & worker;
Arnold, 1924: 719, queen) from Angola; junior synonyms
laboriosa (F Smith, 1858b: 32, queen) from Sierra
Leone, and laevithorax (Menozzi, 1924b: 227,
illustrated, soldier; synonymy with cato Menozzi, 1933a:
113) from Uganda; soldier, worker and queen described (see
Bolton, 1995) .
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F
Smith's original description (1858b) is at
;
Santschi (1926a) summarised the species and subspecies
description, these are at
;
he also provided the outline drawings of the thorax and petiole
scale of species and subspecies (right).
Forel's (1886f) description of meinerti is at
and
.
Forel's (1901d) description of reginae is at
Forel's (1913b) description of cato is at
Forel's (1913b) description of reginae is at
Menozzi's description (1924b) of laevithorax is at
;
Arnold (1924) gave a translation of reginae (of which he
regarded meinerti as a synonym); this is at
.
Among the numerous locations from throughout forest areas of
sub-Saharan Africa, Wheeler (1922) listed Senegal (at
Dakar, F. Silvestri), Guinea (Los Islands by H, Brauns,
Samlia Falls by Mocquerys), Liberia (by Keiselbach, and at
Monrovia by Duke), Ghana (Accra and Addah), Togo (Bismarckburg
by Conradt), Nigeria (Olokemeji, F. Silvestri), Cameroun
(Mundame by Conradt; Bibundi by Tessman; also ssp reginae
by Conradt, and at Victoria by Fickendey).
Nigeria specimens -
MAJOR WORKER - TL 7.73 mm, HL 2.49, HW 2.49, SL 1.77, PW 1.56
MINOR WORKER - TL 5.45 mm, HL 1.56, HW 1.31, SL 1.56, PW 1.06
Colour black, shiny. Sculpturation of fine striations,
particularly evident on the alitrunk. Erect coarse but almost
colourless hairs abundant, and very sparse pilosity. Declivity of
propodeum an obtuse near right-angle. Metanotal groove clearly
incised and promesonotal suture wide. Petiole a sharp scale with a
line of erect hairs on the dorsal edge. |
Wheeler
(1922) illustrated (right) both the nominal form, the ssp cato
(Forel) and described a new variety semidepilis (bottom
right), which differed from the typical form in having paler and
much less numerous erect hairs of the dorsum of the head and body,
plus lesser pubescence on the gaster. In many findings from Zaïre,
nests had been found "rather rotten portions of a tree"
and in a large former termite carton nest (illustrated right and "click"),
when crushed the ants "gave off a stench like bugs"
(shield bugs, presumably). |
The phoytomontage of a cotype of Camponotus vividus
semidepilis from Zaïre, is collated from original
photographs from the MCZ, Harvard University, website at -
MCZ
link.
Santschi (1935) reported cato and meinerti from
Zaïre. Latter also by Forel (1911f), by Dr. Dubois from
Kinshasa [Leopoldville], plus reginae from Kondué
by Luja. Forel (1911e) had reginae from Liberia, no
collector named.
Reported by Bernard (1952) as very common, from Angola to Niger.
In Guinea not so common; F 72, Yanlé; savanna at Kéoulenta
(abundant); Camp IV at 1000 m. Some queens probably of this
species came from Yalanzou and Mount Tô at 1600 m.
In Nigeria, it nests in dead wood on certain species of
forest trees and is often closely associated, as a sub-dominant,
with Crematogaster africana. Found foraging on up to 1.2%
of cocoa trees; also on native trees and plantains; and at 24/76
farms (Taylor & Adedoyin, 1978).
Found in Ghana cocoa by Majer, who found it in 70.1% of
his 144 pkd samples at Kade, with 60-70 workers per sample (1975,
1976a, b, c). Room (1971) found it in 28 cocoa canopy samples. He
also reported its occurrence on cocoa mistletoe (Room, 1972a,
1975), where it was 11th most abundant insect species, 768
individuals (but in less than 30/630 cocoa/mistletoe junction
samples) and 16th most frequent on mistletoe plants. Later found
by Belshaw & Bolton (1994b), who collected only two workers at
Bunso, as 'tourists' in leaf litter under cocoa. Room (1971) also
found it to be positively associated with Crematogaster
africana. |
Listed
as a forest species, able to live in degraded zones, in Ivory
Coast by Lévieux & Louis (1975). In a detailed
study they described it as one of the most common arboreal species
in the region. The research was carried out at an unnamed location
in a degraded forest near the coast at Abidjan. The biology of a
nest from apparently the same area had earlier been studied by
Soulié (1967). It often nests at up to 50m above ground,
with some 6,000 individuals in a colony of some three years of
age. For such a population to inhabit a single nest would require
a cavity of considerable size within a tree and, hence, the more
common situation is that of polycaly, with some five or six nests
per colony. These small nests are constructed within dead
branches, often by reusing the galleries excavated by other
insects, with instances of utilisation of termite nests (Soulié
reported actual elimination of a termite colony). There may be 1-3
nests on any one tree but no preference for any one tree species
was reported. A typical colony appeared to occupy an area of some
25 to 35 metres horizontally and up to 60 metres vertically. The
large area was thought to account for the relatively low density
of the species as a whole. Mapping of an area of mixed cocoa,
cashew and forest trees showed its colonies on separate trees from
Oecophylla longinoda and some apparent displacement of the
latter by the vividus colony. Most of its activity was at the
beginning and end of the daylight hours, but heavy rain causing
leaf wetting inhibited activity.
Writing on the source of food , they described how the bulk (79%)
of its sugar needs are obtained from dried tree gums, especially
from Sterculia traegacantha (Gum Tragacanth, 34% of food)
and Anacardium occidentalis (Cashew, 28% of food),
apparently highly unusual if not unique among ants. Of the
remaining diet, 17% was of undetermined vegetable origin and 21%
of animal origin, almost all insects and of no particular kind.
Some sugars came also from Homoptera which were tended and over
which tents of vegetable material, such as bark fragments from
Terminalia callapa, glued to give a rigid domed structure,
with access only through a hole just sufficient to permit the ant
to enter.
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The
photomontages are of specimens collected in Cameroun -
south-western tropical coastal forest area between Edéa and
Campo (McKey Wolbachia project) - Cameroon 27 from
location 9 km south of Ebodjé, 27 March 2001, on the fallen
rotten trunk of a tree; and Cameroon 45 from location JFK, 05
April 2001, on soil and surface in a forest understorey. |

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Other images can be seen in the folders at - from Cameroun
;
from Gabon ;
and, from Central African Republic at
and
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