Pheidole costauriensis Santschi - new status
Major -
Minor -
Type location Ghana (Pheidole rotundata For. st.
costauriensis n. st., Santschi, 1914a: 433, major;
Santschi, 1915c: 250, minor), from Winnebah, collector unknown
.
Santschi's (1914a) description of costauriensis is at
.
Emery's (1915j) illustrated revision of melancholica, with
notes on costauriensis is at
.
Major (Santschi, 1914a) - comparisons all with
Pheidole
rotundata - TL 5.3 mm; head oval, very convex, slightly
longer than wide in posterior third; with a complete median notch;
eyes in anterior third of head; clypeus feebly carinate with
slightly scalloped anterior margin; mandibles with elongated
punctures changing to striations on outer edges; scape reaches
middle of head; segment three of funiculus as wide as long, others
longer and longer; pronotum strongly conical laterally over all
matt due to fine reticulo-puncturation, upper head and gaster
submatt; pronotum with transverse rugae; yellowish pilosity
sparse, except on gaster and legs; reddish-brown, alitrunk more
red with angles of pronotum and propodeal spines dark brown, legs
yellow brown
Minor - TL 3 mm; head longer and more rounded posteriorly; dorsum
of alitrunk more strongly sculptured; propodeum longer with
stronger spines; black or very dark brown, appendages and
mandibles brownish.
Minor (Santschi, 1915c: 250) - TL 2.5 mm; head more rounded than
rotundata; dorsum of alitrunk and sides of head lightly
reticulo-punctate, but shiny (smooth in the type rotundata)
dark brown
Holotype major collected at Winnebah, from Viehmeyer; minor from
Guinea, Kindia, collector Silvestri, 1 minor Wheeler
(1922) listed melancholica from Ghana (Aburi, F.
Silvestri).
The following specimens from Nigeria appear to match the overall
description and colouration but are larger than those described by
Santschi; although Santschi's size is larger than that of impressifrons. |
Nigeria specimens (Pheidole crassinoda in
Taylor, 1980a: 13)
Colour of both morphs, head and alitrunk brown/dark red-brown,
gaster darker to black, appendages lighter with tarsi and antennal
clubs brown.
MAJOR. TL 8.11 mm, HL 2.91, HW 2.86, SL 1.37, PW 1.21; with the
head principally smooth apart from anterior longitudinal rugae,
dorsum shiny. Pronotum rugulose; mesonotum, propodeum and pedicel
spiculate; postpetiole with lateral sharp apices and light
transverse rugae. Propodeal spines relatively short, narrow and
out-turned triangular. Gaster finely punctate. Erect hairs few on
the head but moderately abundant elsewhere. |
|
MINOR. TL 4.36 mm, HL 1.01, HW 0.86, SL 1.24, PW 0.58with head,
pronotum and gaster; mesonotum, propodeum and pedicel spiculate.
Erect hairs sparse and relatively short. Head with clypeus
medially carinate, shallowly emarginate anteriorly; longitudinal
rugae on the genae. Petiole produced laterally and the anterior of
the peduncle.
An all over lighter variety was also found and this was denoted
as species T¹.
Collected at the Cocoa research Institute of Nigeria, Idi
Ayunre, from a nest in a cocoa crevice, the opening of which was
closed with debris. Will tend aphids on cocoa flowers.
Ewuim, Badejo & Ajayi (1997) used pitfall traps to monitor
the activity of ants in a forest floor and a one-year fallow plot
in Ile-Ife, Nigeria, at monthly intervals from November 1980 to
October 1981, with similar studies in October 1987 and June 1988.
They also made manual collections of ants from the ground surface
of the plots. Ten species of ants were collected, the most common
of which was P. crassinoda. This species accounted for 52%
and 88% of the ants collected manually from forest and fallow
respectively. It was also significantly higher in the pitfall
traps. |
The
photomontage is of a major from Ghana, collector Sky
Stephens, 2006. Other images can be seen in the folder at -
|
The
photomontage is of a minor from Ghana, collector Sky Stephens,
2006. Other images can be seen in the folder at -
|
|