Pachycondyla (Paltothyreus) tarsata (Fabricius)
Type location Senegal (Formica tarsata, from Gorée
Is, Fabricius, 1798: 280, worker; Latreille, 1802c: 736, queen;
Mayr, 1866b: 893, male); subspecies delagoensis (Emery,
1899e: 468, worker & queen) from Mozambique; mediana
(Santschi, 1919h: 80, all forms) from Congo, Brazzaville,
collected by A. Weiss; robusta (Santschi, 1919h: 81,
worker & queen) from Somalia; striata
(Santschi, 1930a: 53, worker) from Benin; striatidens
(Santschi, 1919h: 81, worker & queen) from Kenya; and
subopaca (Santschi, 1919h: 80, worker & queen) from
Gabon, collected at Samkita, by Faure; junior synonyms
gagates (Guérin-Méneville, 1844a: 423,
worker) from Senegal; pestilentia and spiniventris
(both F. Smith, 1858b: 92, worker & male) from Sierra
Leone; simillima (Smith, 1858b: 105, illustrated,
queen) from South Africa; all forms described (see Bolton,
1995) .
Bernard (1952) remarked on the proliferation of varieties,
noting that "with Arnold," he proposed to renounce them
all, especially as the so-called differences were all based on the
patterns of striation and these changed too much with climate to
have any genetic or geographic significance. |
Latreille's
(1802c) description is at
.
Lepeletier de Saint-Fargeau (1835: 194) gave a fuller description,
this is at
.
F Smith (1858b) gave a description, this is at
.
F Smith's (1858b) description of simillima is at
.
Emery's (1899e) description of delagoensis is at
.
Arnold (1915: 44) gave a description, with delagoensis,
these are at
.
Santschi (1919h) listed and described several varieties - these
are at
and his notes with a key to the varieties is at
.
Santschi's (1930a) description of striatus is at
.
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Nigeria
specimens (as Paltothyreus tarsatus, Taylor, 1976: 27).
WORKER. Monomorphic; TL 18.13 mm, HL 3.75, HW 3.67, SL 3.17, PW
2.66. Colour black, extremities dark red-brown, dull except on
terminal segments of the gaster. Relatively coarse striate
sculpture on head and alitrunk. Scattered coarse hairs all over
and moderate pilosity on the alitrunk. Clypeus with the median
portion raised and projecting forwards as a truncated lobe.
Mandibles very large and elongated triangular. Claws with a median
tooth.
Commonly known as the 'Stink Ant', it nests directly into the
ground, with the entrance often surrounded by excavated soil and
remains of arthropods and other food. Usually forage singly.
Among an enormous list of records, Wheeler (1922) had it from
Senegal (Dakar, C. Alluaud; Thiès, F. Silvestri;
Casamance, Clavaux), Guinea-Bissau (Bissis Island, Lucas),
Guinea (Los Islands, C. Alluaud; Conakry, Kakoulima and
Kindia, F. Silvestri), Sierra Leone (Samlia Falls,
Mocquerys), Ivory Coast (Dimbroko, Le Moult; Jacqueville
and Grand Bassam, Lohier; Assinie, C. Alluaud), Ghana
(Accra), Togo (Bismarckburg, Conradt, Büttner) and
Cameroun (Sjöstedt; F. Silvestri; Mundame, Conradt;
Bibundi, Tessmann). He also had mediana from Cameroun
(Molundu, Reichensperger). |
From
Nigeria, Lamborn (1915) described how it (as Paltothyreus
tarsatus) played a useful role in cocoa by attacking and
carrying off termites "on every possible occasion".
Bernard (1952) had many records from the Mt. Nimba, Guinea,
collections (N'Zo, 480 m, 5 queens, 9 males; Guéguépo,
6 workers, 4 queens, 1 male; Kéoulenta, 530 m, 8 workers, 2
males; Yalanzou, 5 workers, 3 males; Sérengbara, 590 m, 1
worker; Nion, 610 m, 20 workers, 1 queen, 1 male; Thio, 680 m, 2
workers; Camp IV, 1000 m, 10 workers, 2 queens. Lamotte had
remarked how it was not found above 1000 m, whereas in southern
and eastern Africa it was known from up to 2000 m; doubtless
because there the savanna and secondary forest went to such
heights.
Described (as Paltothyreus tarsatus) as widespread in
the Ghana semi-deciduous forest zone, 25 specimens from 7
sites, from leaf litter sampling, by Belshaw & Bolton (1994b);
earlier a single worker was collected from cocoa by pkd at Kade by
Majer (1975, 1976b) and 9 workers were collected from the ground
at CRIG by Bigger (1981a).
Lévieux & Diomande (1978) in their description of the
activity of Pachycondyla sennaarensis, mention this
species as found at Ferkéssédougou in the Ivory
Coast Sudan savannah zone. Lévieux (1976a) gave the
nest size as 200-1000; Hölldobler (1984) reported extensive
studies of communication, foraging on termites, tandem running and
nest relocation, also internal anatomy and exocrine glands. Braun
et al. (1994) describe studies of nesting in the Ivory
Coast.
Dejean (1988), Dejean et al. (1993a, as Paltothyreus
tarsatus) studied the spatial components of its foraging
activities in Zaïre.
The photomontage is of a specimen collected in Cameroun
- south-western tropical coastal forest area between Edéa
and Campo (McKey Wolbachia project) - Cameroon 15 from
location BP, 24 March 2001; on soil surface attracted to sardine
oil bait. Other images can be seen in the folder at -
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The photomontage is of a worker from Ghana, collected by S
Sky Stephens, 2006. Other images can be seen in the folder at -
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The photomontage is of a queen from Ghana, collected by S Sky
Stephens, 2006. Other images can be seen in the folder at -
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The photomontage is of a worker from Gabon, collected by
Yves Braet, 2006. Other images can be seen in the folder at -
also from the Central African Republic at
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The
photomontage is collated from
http://www.antweb.org.
Gabon: Prov. Ogooue-Maritime; Reserve de Faune de la
Moukalaba-Dougoua, 12.2 km 305° NW Doussala; 02°19'00"S
010°32'00"E 110m
Collection Information: Collection codes: BLF2122 Date: 24 Feb
2000
Collected by: B.L.Fisher Method: EC19 sifted litter
Habitat: rainforest Transect Type: MW 50 sample transect, 5m
Transect Sample No.: 30
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