Platythyrea conradti Emery
Type location Cameroun (Emery, 1899e: 464, worker &
male) no location, collected by Conradt, in; junior synonym monodi
(Bernard, 1952: 185, worker) from Guinea, Mt. Nimba ;
worker and male described (see Bolton, 1995)
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Emery's (1899e) description is at
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Nigeria specimens (Taylor, 1976: 9). WORKER. Size rather variable but approximately: TL
12.5 mm, HL 2.55, HW 2.3, SL 2.55 and PW 1.87
Colour generally black but with dull grey appearance due to dense
pubescence, extremities red-brown. No denticles on propodeum or
petiole.
Fairly common in Nigeria. Found on 1% or more of cocoa
trees at CRIN, but always in small numbers (Taylor, 1977). Nests
found in dead branch ends and crevices on live trees. Usually
forage singly on cocoa and surrounding shrubs, tend Homoptera and
may build debris tents. Listed by Eguagie (1971) from Agodi near
Ibadan.
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Wheeler (1922) noted a West Africa finding by Fulleborn; plus
others from Congo areas. The latter included the Forel (1915c)
note of Kohl's collection from in a small hollow tree trunk, at
St. Gabriel, Zaïre.
Bernard (1952) described monodi from a single worker
collected at Mt. Nimba, Camp IV, by Lamotte, 2.vi.1942. He
described the principal differences from conradti as being
an absence of the ashy-grey pubescence; and a considerably shorter
and more rounded thorax, specimen TL 11.0. The latter is clearly
shown in his illustration . |
Brown
(1975: 46) examined the monodi type and felt that it
compared well with specimens of conradti from the Banco
Forest Reserve, near Abidjan, Ivory Coast, although the
monodi "has a very slightly higher and shorter
petiolar node"; a characteristic shared with some specimens
of conradti from French Congo (determined by
Santschi). He, Brown, had collected the Banco specimens from a
nest in a hollow trunk of a small living tree, with an entrance
about 1.5 m above ground.
Colony size in Ivory Coast some 300-500 adults (Lévieux,
1976a); feeding habits mainly eating moth larvae (Noctuidae) (Lévieux,
1976c).
Given as fairly common on young cocoa in Ghana by
Strickland (1951a), who regarded it as a chance migrant from leaf
litter. Leston (1970) described it as a stump-nesting predatory
ant and the only ponerine which ascended trees. Later, however, it
was found in twenty-six of the 168 cocoa canopy samples collected
by Room (1971) in southern Ghana; it appears to have been found on
those trees which had none of the common dominant ants. Collected
by pkd at Kade by Majer (1975, 1976b) with 1-3 workers in two
samples. Two workers were collected by pkd from the canopy of
Amelonado cocoa at CRIG by Bigger (1981a), and it was found as a
'tourist' in one sample of leaf litter at Old Tafo (Belshaw &
Bolton, 1994b). Marchart (1968, cited in Entwistle, 1972) used
radiotracers to study predators of mirids and found P.
conradti to be among them; colonies are described as being
less than 100 strong and foraging solitary. |
It
was among the non-dominant species recorded in the Cameroun
forest canopy studies at Campo
by Dejean and colleagues. They noted it as nesting in the middle
stratum only (hollowed branches) with 5 findings on the 30 trees
examined. Other studies in Cameroun by Déjean &
Suzzoni (1997) have thrown light on how the species is one of the
few ponerines able to be truly arboreal. This is attributed to its
development of a remarkable method of transporting sugary liquids.
Ponerines cannot do this by filling and distending the crop
portion of the gut, unlike many higher ants. What conradti
has done is to utilise the surface tension inherent in fluid
droplets to transport sizeable amounts adhering to the underside
of the head and alitrunk. These collections are taken back to the
nest and mostly deposited on the walls of the nest (where
nestmates can imbibe) or deposited on the ventral side of the
larvae. As an added social element nest-mates also feed on
droplets while they are being carried, a form of mutual behaviour
Déjean & Suzzoni term the social bucket. The place of
Platythyrea conradti in the arboreal mosaic was described
as non-dominant, the species avoiding conflict with a dominant by
being active only during the early hours of the day, when Dejean &
Suzzoni stated that dominants are only slightly active.
The photomontage of a specimen from Nigeria is collated
from
http://www.antweb.org/specimen.do?name=SAM-HYM-C002301A
Collection Information; Specimen Code SAM-HYM-C002301A; Locality
Nigeria: Ajassor Ikom, E. Nigeria; 06°00'00"N 008°41'00"E;
Collection codes: SAM-HYM-C002301; Date: 1 Feb 1958; Collected by:
Nat. Mus. S. Rhodesia |
The photomontage is of a specimen from Benin; Collection
details - Bonou, Forêt de Ghamboué; N 06°22'28"
E 02°31'32"; Pitfall trap; S Tchibozo; 27.viii.2006.
Other images can be seen in the folders at -
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