Crematogaster (Crematogaster) excisa (Mayr)
Type location Congo (Mayr, 1895: 139, worker); subspecies
bomaella (Santschi, 1935a: 258, see below) from Zaïre,
cavinota (Stitz, 1916: 385, illustrated, worker) from Central
Africa Republic, between Fort de Possel and Fort Crampel, by
Schubotz (not "Congo" as given in Bolton, 1995); lacustris
(Santschi, 1914b: 99, worker) from Tanzania; worker only
described (see Bolton, 1995)
.
Also originally described as a variety of excisa was
maledicta (Forel, 1914d: 236, worker & queen) from
Zimbabwe; Santschi (1920b: 15) placed it as a variety of
sjostedti, which in turn he listed, without giving any
justification, as a stirps of gerstaeckeri (Santschi,
1930b), which is where it remains in Bolton (1995: 157). Assuming,
however, that Arnold (1920a: 502) gave a sound translation and his
illustration (right) was correct, there seems good reason to place
it back here as a subspecies of excisa
Mayr's (1895) description is at
.
Forel's (1914d) description of maledicta is at
.
Arnold (1920a: 501) gave a translation, this is at
.
Santschi's (1914b) description of lacustris is at
.
Stitz's (1916) description of cavinota is at
.
Arnold (1920a: 501) gave a translation of maledicta, this
is at
.
Santschi's (1935a) description of bomaella is at
.
|
Wheeler
(1922) listed excisa from Sierra Leone (without
details), noting that in Zaïre the specimens had been
collected from nests in a tree trunk and a hollow tree.
Santschi (1935a) also saw workers from Kunungu, Matadi, Boma and
Kasai (Dumbi), Zaïre; adding that as with the type (specimens
from Mayr) the propodeum was feebly but clearly longitudinally
rugose; those he saw from Bas Congo were less strongly sculptured.
His description of bomaella, from Boma (collected by Dr R.
Schouteden, 8.ix.1920) was -
WORKER - TL 2.6-3.2 mm. Overall red brown; funiculus (other than
the club), joints of legs and gaster (other than darker apex)
clearer yellow brown. Head shiny and smooth, except for the genae,
which have fine longitudinal striations. Thorax matt, finely
reticulo-punctate with irregular elongated and anastomosed
striations, stronger in large specimens. Sides of thorax with fine
reticulation giving the appearance of longitudinal striae;
sculpturation intermediate between excisa and andrei.
Gaster smooth; with some erect translucent hairs, more numerous
apically. Pilosity fine and spaced out on body and appendages.
Head slightly larger than excisa, sides arcuate but with
more convex, larger eyes. Clypeus smooth, almost flat and without
a carina; anterior border as excisa in being slightly
arcuate. Post-clypeal notch shallow (very marked in euphrosyne
- a variety now excluded by Bolton, 1995). Scape reaching
occipitum; funiculus segments 2-7 short, no longer than wide; club
thick, with last segment slightly longer than wide. Pronotum
laterally bordered, dorsal face flat (as excisa).
Mesonotum as wide as long, sides bordered with a sharp declivity
posteriorly and lightly carinateed anteriorly. Propodeal spines
divergent, as long as the propodeal dorsum, seen from above the
space between the bases is rectilinear, the points of the spines
slightly farther apart than the width of the pronotum. Petiole as
wide as long, anterior angles rounded, sides feebly roughened.
Postpetiole deeply incised. Overall resembling impressa
ssp brazai but smaller and clearer, thorax more sculptured
and propodeal spines more divergent; clypeus less convex. Differs
from menilekii (as satanula) by the much finer
sculpturation and shorter propodeal spines. |
Crematogaster
(Crematogaster) species T¹ Nigeria specimens
TL variable 2.18-2.64 mm. Largest HL 0.70, HW 0.70, SL 0.56, PW
0.40
Colour medium-dark brown, shiny. Lateral alitrunk very faintly
striate. Pilosity sparse, few erect hairs. Alitrunk profile a
flattened convex curve with a slight depression at the metanotal
groove. Propodeal spines halfway down the declivity, no more than
sharp denticles. Subpetiolar spine small, acute and triangular.
In Nigeria I found it on cocoa and once nesting in dead
wood on a garden tree. |
|