Tetraponera tessmanni (Stitz)
Type location Equatorial Guinea (Sima tessmanni, Stitz, 1910: 131, illustrated, worker;
Santschi, 1919h: 84, queen; Wheeler, 1922: 110, male) collected at Alen, by Tessmann; senior
synonym of castanea from Zaïre (at Avakubi,
by Lang & Chapin; Wheeler, 1922: 112, worker & queen, as a
variety); worker, male and queen described (see Bolton, 1995)
.
Stitz's (1910) description is at
.
Santschi (1919h) described the female at
- commenting close to mayri but that has a more distinctly
dentate propodeum. |
Description and illustration from Wheeler (1922).
WORKER -
Length
3 to 3.5 mm. Head longer than broad, a little broader behind than
in front, with feebly concave cheeks, rounded posterior corners
and nearly straight posterior border, and, on the vertex, with a
short longitudinal impression at one end of which the anterior
ocellus is sometimes distinctly developed. Posterior ocelli
absent. Eyes very small, flat, shorter than half their distance
from the mandibular insertions, placed a little in front of the
middle of the head. Mandibles short, rather strongly angulate at
the base externally, their apical margins oblique, with 5 or 6
denticles, those at the base often indistinct. Clypeus convex and
evenly rounded in the middle, its anterior border projecting,
entire, strongly emarginate on the sides. Frontal groove absent.
Antennae short, scapes not reaching to the middle of the head,
first funicular joint much longer than broad, joints 2 to 8 much
broader than long, crowded together, joints 9 to 11 forming a
three-jointed club, the last joint being as long as both the
others, which are subequal and somewhat broader than long. Thorax
narrower than the head, constricted in the mesonotal region.
Pronotum from above a little broader than long, evenly rounded and
convex; mesonotum transversely subelliptical, feebly convex,
surrounded by impressed sutures. Metanotum nearly as long as the
mesonotum, concave, with uneven surface. Propodeum very convex and
rounded, egg-shaped from above, semiglobose in profile, as high as
the pronotum or slightly higher, with the slit-shaped epinotal
glands shining through the integument and conspicuously enlarged.
Petiole short, scarcely longer than broad, broader behind than in
front, convex and rounded above. In profile, its ventral surface
is also convex and protuberant, with a small, compressed, blunt,
translucent tooth anteriorly. Postpetiole a little broader than
the petiole, scarcely broader than long and scarcely broader
behind than in front, convex and rounded above and below. Legs and
gaster of the usual shape, the latter with well-developed sting.
Very smooth and shining, including the mandibles; impunctate
under a magnification of 20 diameters. Hairs golden yellow, erect,
of uneven length, sparse, most numerous on the gaster, especially
along its sides. These regions also have more numerous short hairs
or suberect pubescence. Antenna and legs with shorter, more
appressed hairs. Cheeks and clypeus densely and conspicuously
pubescent, the latter without a fringe of cilia-like bristles.
Clear brownish yellow, with the borders of the mandibles, clypeus
and frontal carinae brown. The variety castanea was
morphologically similar but the body and legs were pale chestnut
brown, with the antennae paler and more yellowish.
The photomontage of the
castanea type is collated from
http://mcz-28168.oeb.harvard.edu/mcz/FMPro?-DB=Image.fm&-Lay=web&-Format=images.htm&Species_ID=20530&-Find.
Wheeler (1922) described how several hundred specimens were
taken at Medje, Zaïre, by Mr Lang, from the hollow stems of
Vitex staudtii Guerke. In the report of the Lang-Chapin
expedition there also is much information on the relation between
the ant and the plant (Bequaert, 1922, p 447) and on the woody
structure of the plant (by Professor Bailey) (see
Ant Plants). |