Oecophylla longinoda sensu strictu (Latreille)
Type location Senegal (Formica longinoda,
Latreille, 1802c, worker; minor described as Oecophylla
brevinodis nov sp, André, 1890: 313)
.
The original description by Latreille (1802c) is at
.
My translation) is -
"The long-node ant (la Fourmi long-noeud). Formica
longinoda
Rust-coloured, elongated; long antenna, with the first segment
red; head large; petiole scale long, gaster small.
Rufescens elongata; antennis longis, primo articulo rufo;
capite magno; squam elongata; abdomine parvo.
TL 0.007 m - she is rust-red or pale chestnut, almost glabrous,
elongated. The antennae are long, of a redddish-yellow, with the
first joint of a brighter colour. The head is large, wider than
the alitrunk ("corcelet"), almost heart-shaped, convex
and rounded posteriorly. The anterior (clypeus) without carinae,
and the frontal area with a feeble notch. The mandibles are
strong, triangular, concolorous with the body, meeting against
each other on the interior border, hooked, with the apices
crossing. The eyes are quite large and blackish. The alitrunk is
raised, and rounded anteriorly, narrowed in its middle, behind
with inequalities in its narrowing; the posterior extremity also
is a little raised, rounded and finishing with a slope. The
(petiole) scale is cuneiform and elongated towards the apex; there
is a quite large gap between the scale and the gaster, which is
small and near round. The legs are long, pale yellowish-red.
This species lives in Senegal. Specimen in the national Museum of
Natural History".
Bolton (1995: 298) shows longinoda as reduced to a
junior synonym of virescens (i.e. smaragdina) by F
Smith (1858b: 29) but resurrected to species by Dalla Torre (1893:
176). Dalla Torre's contribution was solely to catalogue species
and there was no argued knowledge. Dalla Torre cited "Oecophylla
longinoda Gerstaecker, v.d.Deceken: Ost-Afrika.
Gliedertheiere, 1873, p. 343, n.44". An alternative and
earlier reference is Gerstaecker (1871: 354), nominally reporting
insects from Zanzibar (as then understood), which include - "Oecophylla
longinoda Latr., Hist. nat. d. Fourm. p. 184, pl.XI, fig. 72
(= Form virescens Smith, pars). Von Mombas". Looking
at F Smith (1860b: 101), where he wrote on the genus Oecophylla,
it appears he had seen only specimens from South Africa. It seems
possible that the specimens were of
Oecophylla
textor, which I suggest as probably a distinct species
closer to smaragdina than to the type longinoda].
Andre's (1890) description of the minor worker, thinking it was
a distinct species, Oecophylla brevinodis, from among the
major workers of "Oecophylla smaragdina" from
Sierra Leone, is at
.
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Wheeler
(1922) gave rather a vague description of the typical form. He
wrote of differences from smaragdina but one can extract -
The integument is more decidedly opaque; the mandibles
are somewhat more coarsely striated, always darker, being
concolorous with the posterior portion of the head, at least in
the large workers, and especially in the dark varieties. As to the
female the wing veins are heavily bordered with dark brown; and
the bases of the second and following gastric segments are
broader, darker and more sharply marked off; the green portions of
the typical female are more olivaceous and less pea-green; and the
basal bands of the gaster are more exposed and brownish; the
appendages are more brownish. The male (TL 6-6.5 mm) is darker and
more blackish. The workers he separated by the key [as above].
Thus, the typical worker is the ferruginous (rust-coloured)
form. On size variation Wheeler is somewhat vague, writing - "In
the worker the polymorphism is greater [than smaragdina],
for not only do the individuals of the same colony show a greater
range in size (from 3 to 9 mm) but the minimae differ more from
the mediae and maximae in the shape of the thorax and petiole".
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In Nigeria the only form I ever saw was of what I take as the
typical variety; these are shown in my drawing and the enlargement
of my photograph of a nest in a cocoa tree.
DESCRIPTION - (type form, CRIN Nigeria) dimorphic, with a
subsidiary polymorphy within the major form of, at least, some
varieties.
Major worker - TL 8.04 mm, HL 1.71, HW 1.62, SL 2.49, PW 0.93
Minor worker - TL 4.56 mm, HL 1.09, HW 1.06, SL 0.96, PW 0.59
Gotwald (1973) examined the mouthparts of major workers from
Ghana, see .
The general features of the head mouthparts in his illustrations
(Fig. 1 & 5) match those of what I regard as the type form. |
The photomontages are of specimens collected in Cameroun -
south-western tropical coastal forest area between Edéa and
Campo (McKey Wolbachia project) - Cameroon 01 from
location Ebodjé, 24 March 2001, on plants near the beach.
Note the close-up of the head surface texture which has no
sculpturation other than the fine micro-reticulation, whereas the
possible claridens (Cameroon 56) has distinct but
scattered shallow pits. |
Minima
- |
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Oecophylla longinoda variety annectens Wheeler
(1922)
Wheeler's description was -
WORKER - very similar to the typical form but brown
instead of ferruginous, the gaster sometimes slightly darker than the
remainder of the body. Mandibles, except in the small workers, darker
brown than the front, cheeks, and clypeus. Incrassated tips of
antennal scapes with a dark brown spot; funiculi, knees, tarsi, and
tips of tibiae pale yellow; pulvilli black.
FEMALE - brown, instead of green and brown like the typical longinoda,
with darker brown markings on the thorax. Second and following
gastric segments with the basal bands velvety black, so that the
gaster is distinctly fasciate. Funiculi, tips of scapes, tibiae,
tarsi, and vertex paler, more reddish brown. Wings slightly darker
than in the typical form, with deeper brown margins to the veins.
MALE - darker brown than the worker. Mandibles, antennae, tarsi,
and articulations of legs brownish yellow; last tarsal joint black.
Wings distinctly paler than in the female.
Described from a long series of specimens from the following
places: Avakubi (type locality), Kisangani [Stanleyville] and
Niangara (Lang and Chapin); Malela (J.Bequaert).
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Oecophylla longinoda variety rufescens Santschi
Type location - Congo (Santschi, 1928f, worker and queen)
collected at Brazzaville, by A. Weiss, worker & queen types; also
from Cameroun, Molundu; Zaïre, Dungu, by
Hutereau, and Yambata, by DiGiorgi.
Santschi's (1928f) description is at
.
A dark form but with mandibles brown rather than black as in fusca
and funiculi wholly brown, rather than with a light area as in annectens.
Santschi noted how a queen of
Crematogaster
stadelmanni was found with the Oecophylla and
remarked on the apparent mimicry of form |