Myrmicaria exigua André
Type location Sierra Leone (André, 1890: 320,
worker & male) 5 workers & male collected by Mocquerys;
subspecies gracilis (Stitz, 1910: 133, worker) from Cameroun,
workers, from Bibundi, by Tessmann; kisangani (Wheeler,
1922: 148, workers) from Zaïre, see below, obscura
(Santschi, 1920c: 120, worker) workers from Zaïre by
Bequaert and Congo by Kohl; pulla (Santschi,
1920c: 119, queen) workers, two locations, Bequaert and Gerard;
and rufiventris (Forel, 1915c: 345, worker), four
locations by Kohl, from Zaïre; and simplex
(Stitz, in Santschi, 1925c: 170, worker) from Cameroun;
(see Bolton, 1995) .
André's (1890) description is at
.
Stiz's (1910) description of gracilis is at
.
Forel (1910e: 445) gave a full description of gracilis,
this is at .
Forel's (1915c) description of rufiventris is at
.
Santschi's (1920c) descriptions of pulla and obscura
are at .
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The only African arboreal member of the genus. Wheeler (1922)
also listed the nominal species, TL 3-3.5 mm, from Cameroun
(H. Brauns), and described it as found crawling around the
base of an orange tree at Kisangani [Stanleyville] in Zaïre;
noting also that rufiventris was reported by Kohl (via
Forel) as building "carton nests 3-4 cm in diameter on leaves"
(Forel's 1916 record has the nests as constructed of a tissue like
material and not of simple carton). In his introduction to the
genus, he noted that the smaller species in the Orient also make
small carton nests on the underside of leaves.
Bernard (1952) noted that a single worker of the variety obscura
had been collected at Yalanzou, Guinea, of this sole
aboricolous member of the genus, previously the variety had not
been found outside the Congo. |
Santschi (1925) had the following description -
Easily distinguished from other African Myrmicaria but
very variable in the characters that serve to define the different
forms.
His species sensu strictu description is -
WORKER TL 3.5 - 4.4 mm. Reddish-brown to brownish yellow;
gaster more or less darker. shiny. Head and thorax with scattered
rugae and variably reticulated; similar on the sides of the head
and thorax, variably spaced, often effaced on the central area of
the head, the pronotal dorsum and the upper propodeum. Remainder
smooth. Pale long pilosity abundant on the body and appendages.
Head oval larger to the posterior. Eyes set between the middle
and the hind quarter of the sides of the head. Mandibles striated,
with 4 teeth. Clypeus convex and without carinae. Frontal area not
very distinct, rugae sinuous. Antennal scape more than twice the
length of the posterior border of the eye. All funiculus segments
longer and more slender than those of natalensis. Dorsum
of pronotum and anterior mesonotum flat and edged. Lateral angles
of pronotum without denticles. Anterior and posterior faces of the
mesonotum separated by a strong ridge abutted on each side by a
small tubercle or rudimentary lobe. Anterior face of propodeum
rectangular, longer than wide, flat but slightly lower than the
level of the mesonotum.
The
petiole peduncle much longer than the node, with the node less
high than long. The subpetiole face is rounded as in nigra.
Petiole node with very oblique anterior and posterior borders.
Viewed from above it appears about 50-66% wider than the peduncle.
The postpetiole is triangular with a rounded summit of a similar
height to the petiole, the anterior declivity is more oblique than
the posterior. |
Forel's (1915c) description of rufiventris -
TL 3.8-4.6; differing from type solely by its clearer,
rust-coloured gaster; and by the head being a little more
elongated and narrower posteriorly. Specimens came from St.
Gabriel, Lumaliza and Batiamponde, Zaïre, collected by Kohl;
found in small, round (3-4 cm diameter) carton nests built on
leaves. |
Wheeler's (1922) description of kisangani -
WORKER - length 3 to 3.5 mm. Head through the eyes
scarcely longer than broad, evenly rounded behind. Mandibles
4-toothed. Clypeus ecarinate, convex, with entire, rounded
anterior border. Frontal carinae subparallel. Eyes convex, just
behind the middle of the head. Antennal scapes extending about
two-fifths their length beyond the posterior border of the head;
apical funicular joint fusiform, enlarged as in the typical exigua.
Pronotum more flattened above, though bluntly angular on the sides
and without inferior teeth. Promesonotal suture distinct.
Mesonotum with a small but distinct tooth on each side in front
and the posterior lobes larger, erect, and rather acute. Metanotal
groove very distinct and rather long. Propodeum not longer than
broad, scarcely narrowed in front, its base longitudinally grooved
in the middle, marginate on each side and not longer than the
declivity, which is also marginate laterally; spines not longer
than their distance apart at the base, straight, directed
backward, upward, and outward, their tips not bent inward as in
the typical exigua. Petiolar peduncle as long as the node,
swollen at the spiracles; node longer than broad, as high as long,
laterally compressed, constricted behind. Postpetiole longer than
broad, broader and higher behind than in front, its node
distinctly lower than that of the petiole. Anterior border of
gaster straight or even slightly concave, with prominent anterior
corners.
Shining: mandibles subopaque, longitudinally striate. Clypeus
smooth in the middle, delicately rugulose on the sides. Head
smooth in the middle of the front, delicately and irregularly
longitudinally rugulose on the sides, posteriorly
reticulate-rugose, but much less sharply than in the typical
exigua. Pronotum with a few longitudinal rugae, sometimes absent
in the middle line; in some specimens reticulately-rugose over the
whole surface, with very large meshes as in exigua. Sides
of pronotum smooth and shining; meso- and metapleurae subopaque,
longitudinally rugulose. Base of propodeum transversely rugulose,
declivity smooth and shining. Pedicel, gaster, and legs smooth and
shining, with very sparse and minute, piligerous punctures.
Pilosity like that of the typical exigua, grey or whitish.
Piceous, nearly black; tips of mandibles, peduncle of petiole,
declivity of propodeum, base of postpetiole and in some specimens
the whole gaster or only the base of the first segment brown.
Described from numerous specimens taken at Kisangani
[Stanleyville], Zaïre, (Lang & Chapin) "crawling
about the base of an orange tree." I have compared this form
with two cotypes from Sierra Leone (Mocquerys), received many
years ago from André, and a worker from Gaboon
(Staudinger). The new subspecies differs in its much darker color,
feebler sculpture, laterally more compressed petiolar node and in
the shape of the mesonotum, which in the typical form of the
species lacks the anterior tooth on each side and has only feeble
indications of the posterior lobes. Forel has described a variety,
rufiventris, from carton nests 3 to 4 cm. in diameter on
leaves at St. Gabriel, Lumaliza, and Batiamponde (Kohl), all
localities near Stanleyville. This form is larger (3.8 to 4.6 mm)
and, according to Forel, "differs from the type of André
only in its paler, reddish abdomen and in having the head more
elongate and narrower behind." |
Santschi (1925) also gave the following key to the
subspecies of exigua
| 1 |
Colour pale yellow-brown or reddish-yellow |
2 |
| -- |
Colour dark brown to black |
3 |
| 2 |
Gaster concolourous or slightly darker; TL
3.5-4.3 mm (Sierra Leone) |
M. exigua
André |
| -- |
Gaster lighter, reddish-yellow, sometimes head
a little browner (Zaïre) |
var rufiventris Forel |
| 3 |
Black, articulations of petiole brownish, TL
3.8-4 mm (Zaïre) |
var pulla
Santschi |
| -- |
In part black and lighter brown |
4 |
| 4 |
Propodeal spines a little longer than their
width apart; body (dark) brown, gaster black; petiole narrower
(Cameroun) |
var gracilis
Stitz |
| -- |
Propodeal spines shorter than their width
apart, gaster as light or lighter than head |
5 |
| 5 |
Matt, petiole as with gracilis (Cameroun) |
var simplex
Stitz |
| -- |
Shining, petiole larger |
6 |
| 6 |
Reddish-brown, head often a little darker;
mesonotal angles feebly lobed or tuberculous, declivity oblique
(Zaïre and Congo) |
var obscura
Santschi |
| -- |
Head blackish, thorax variable brown, gaster
often lighter; mesonotal angles distinctly lobed, declivity near
vertical (Zaïre) |
var kisangani Wheeler |
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The photomontage is of specimens collected in Cameroun -
south-western tropical coastal forest area between Edéa and
Campo (McKey Wolbachia project) - Cameroon 105 from
location JFK, 24 April 2001; at extrafloral nectaries of a shrub
in a treefall gap. Although unimportant, the key in Santschi
(1925c) leads to these specimens being of the subspecies gracilis
Stitz, in being brown with a black gaster and the propodeal spines
being not much longer than their basal separation. Other images
can be seen in the folder at -
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