Crematogaster (Sphaerocrema) striatula Emery
Type location Ivory Coast (Crematogaster striatulus,
Emery, 1892c: liii, worker; Emery, 1899e: 482, queen) collected at
Assinie, by Ch. Alluaud, in ; subspecies benitensis
(Santschi, 1910c: 374, worker) from Equatorial [Spanish]
Guinea, collected at River Benito, by de Brazza (location
wrongly given as Congo by Bolton, 1995) and obstinata
(Santschi, 1911g: 207, worker) from Congo, collected at
Gomba, by A. Weiss; horatii (Santschi, 1937a: 55, worker)
from Kenya, and langi (Santschi, 1926b: 225,
worker; placed with striatula by Menozzi, 1942: 169) and
omega (Santschi, 1926b: 224; Santschi, 1935a: 259, worker)
from Zaïre (see Bolton, 1995)
.
Emery's (1892c) description is at
.
Emery's (1899e) description of the queen is at
.
Santschi's (1910c) description of benitensis is at
.
Santschi's (1911g) description of obstinata is at
.
Santschi's (1926b) descriptions of langi and omega
are at
.
Santschi's (1937a) description of horatii is at
.
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Nigeria specimens (Taylor, 1979: 33). WORKER. TL variable
3.05-3.42 mm; largest HL 0.86, HW 0.87, SL 0.70, PW 0.50
Colour very dark, red-brown to black, tarsi and antennal funiculi
yellow; shiny. Head finely striate. Alitrunk striated on dorsum
and laterally, faint on lateral pronotum. Lateral mesonotum
spiculate. Pilosity sparse, erect hairs moderately abundant.
Profile of pro- and mesonotum flat, mesonotum with a slight
carina, propodeum on a lower level. Propodeal spines long, acute
and slightly down curved. Dorsal surface of petiole smooth and
flat, subpetiolar spine acute triangular. |
The
photomontage is of specimens collected in Cameroun -
south-western tropical coastal forest area between Edéa and
Campo (McKey Wolbachia project) - Cameroon 07 from
location EBO, 24 March 2001, on soil and surface in forest
understorey; Cameroon 70 from location BOU, 18 April 2001, at
nectaries of Alchorea floribunda; Cameroon 87 from
location BOU, 18 April 2001, on soil and surface; Cameroon 119
from location Kouedjina, 17 February 2000, on cocoa tree. Other
images can be seen in the folder at -
.
Wheeler (1922) had numerous other records including Sierra
Leone, Ghana (Aburi, F. Silvestri), Cameroun (Douala,
von Rothkirch). It was also found inhabiting the hollow twigs of
Barteria fistulosa (Bequaert, 1922, p438-9).
Nests in dead wood on trees. Found throughout West Africa
(Strickland, 1951a). Donisthorpe (1945a, b) wrote of it as a
tropical West African species, with the typical form known from
Sierra Leone, etc., and varieties in the French Congo,
Ivory Coast, etc. He recorded findings all with Coccidae as
follows - H.E. Box had collected specimens from Ivory Coast,
at Cibengouron (or Abengourou?) (18.v.1944); with Pseudococccus
species on swollen shoot infected cocoa; with a Pseudococcus
on a liana vine at Bansa, Ghana (2.v.1944) and from a
sapling in primary forest at Bunsu (1.i.1945) and, also from cocoa
at Bawdua, near Kade (by K.O. Darko, 2.xii.1944), and Nkawkaw
(J.Paine, 23.xi.1944); at Lekleki, Dafo, and Bame Pass, Togo
(2-4.xi.1944) on coffee and cocoa. |
In
Ghana it is regarded as a common dominant. Leston (1973)
regarded it as the most frequent dominant, especially in heavily
shaded farms with abundant dead wood, and important as a tender of
coccids, and also on dense secondary forest. Evans (1973), who had
worked closely with Leston, described its role as a vector of Phytophthora
pod rot of cocoa, and added that it was a common cocoa ant
dominating substantial areas under suitable conditions. At CRIG it
was the commonest of the subgenus, found in 778 of 3,766 arboreal
samples (Strickland, 1948, 1951a), and occurring on numerous
forest trees, plus kola and mango. Room (1971) used as it one of
his selected species for the 30 dominated trees, and found it on 5
other trees. He does, however, note that it was far easier to find
in the Tafo area than elsewhere. Room also reported its occurrence
on cocoa mistletoe - being fourth most abundant insect, with 3,442
workers, from 32 of 630 samples of the mistletoe/cocoa junction
(ranked 25th) (Room, 1972a, b, 1975). Majer found it in 36.8% of
his 144 pkd samples at Kade, with 3500-5000 workers per sample
(1975, 1976a, b, c). At CRIG in 1979-76, however, Bigger (1981a,
1993b) found it only as an immigrant forager on the ground of his
study block of Amazon cocoa (this had been the block, the
Amelonado cocoa, used for much of Strickland's work). Bigger
(1981a) tabulated a number of surveys in Ghana and the occurrence
was quite variable at CRIG, from 2.4-41%. It was described as
widespread by Belshaw & Bolton (1994b), who found it, as a
'tourist', in leaf litter samples at thirteen locations in the
semi-deciduous forest zone.
In contrast it appears to be quite rare on cocoa in Nigeria,
where it has been found nesting in old dry cherelles. Also found
on native shrubs and trees, plus on 17-20% of both coffee and
kola, and on oil palm (Taylor, 1977). However, earlier from CRIN,
found on >10% of cocoa in pkd collections from two cocoa
blocks, W13/2 and W18/1 (Booker 1968).
From Ivory Coast, there is a description of larval
stages by Delage-Darchen (1978).
The photomontage is of further specimens from Cameroun,
collected from Phyllobotrion, at Banyong Mbo, 12.iii.2006,
by Hauke Koch. Other images can be seen in the folders at -
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