Polyrhachis lacteipennis F Smith
Type location India (Smith, 1858b: 60, illustrated,
queen); junior synonym simplex (Mayr, 1862: 682, queen;
and its junior synonyms obsoleta, Forel, 1893c: 26, in
key, worker; and spiniger, Mayr, 1879: 653, worker &
male, synonymy Forel, 1893c: 36) all from India; ssp grisescens
(Emery, 1895k: 483, worker & queen, synonymy Bolton, 1974b:
177) from Myanmar [noted only that pubescence much less
sparse giving a grey reflection to the gaster].
F Smith's (1858b) description is at
.
Mayr's (1862) description of simplex is at
.
Mayr's (1879: 653) description of spiniger is at
.
Forel's (1893c) description is at
.
Note - although F Smith (1858b) stated the petiole (of a queen)
as having the centre of the margin emarginate, his drawing Fig 40
shows the petiole with a pair of short median spines or teeth!
Bingham's (1903) illustration of the worker clearly shows the
petiole as described by Smith, i.e. emarginate medially.
Bingham (1903: 383ff) gave a key to Polyrhachis from the
Indian subcontinent - simplex keys as - alitrunk and
petiole armed with spines or teeth ... pronotum and propodeum with
a spine on each side (mesonotum unarmed) ... propodeum not
laterally margined ... propodeal spines not hooked ...pubescence
sparse ... petiole spines not very wide-spreading (not encircling
gaster) ... generally black ... head, alitrunk and petiole finely
punctate ... node of petiole without median spines ... simplex
(p 394). Bingham does not mention lacteipennis in his very
comprehensive text, even though it appears to be one of the
commonest members of the genus in southern Asia.
The specimens sent to BT from Israel and shown below would
appear to differ significantly from the (poor) descriptions of
lacteipennis from the Indian sub-continent and a fuller
analysis could lead to a separation of the Egypt-Middle East
specimens into a distinct species [BT opinion]
Egypt records - Wheeler & Mann (1916) reported it as
junior synonym simplex; as spiniger from Wadi
Feran, Sinai Peninsula, nesting on trees and tending Membracids.
Emery (1925b), however, drew attention to Forel (1909e, pp
402-407; unavailable on HNS) where it was stated to make a
silk-lined nest in a subterranean cavity. Menozzi (1929e: 128)
reported two queens from Wadi Scheich and diverse workers from
Wadi Feiran, collected in Sinai by F S Bodenheimer.Also by Finzi
(1936) from Wadi Feran, 4.iii.1935.
Mohamad thesis (1979) had - "Polyrhachis viscosa"
- Gebel Elba, 16-26.i.1933 (Coll.Min.) - this probably was
an error for P. lacteipennis, as there is a superficial
similarity, although viscosa is easily separated by the
alitrunk dorsum having sharp lateral margination.
The apparent discontinuity in geographical distribution appears
to be bridged by the reports in Collingwood (1985: 274, as simplex)
and Collingwood & Agosti (1996: 375) of findings in Oman,
Yemen and Saudi Arabia. These authors also refer to median petiole
spines as being absent or reduced to tubercles. In neither paper,
however, is there any description of the specimens. |
By
extracting from Forel's (1893c) key (as simplex) one gets
the following description (from the progressive key couplets) -
Eyes rounded; alitrunk not bordered, or with solely the propodeum
bordered; scupture accentuated, matt or subopaque, alitrunx
spined; mesonotum unarmed, petiole bispinose; body, at least in
part, with distinct sculpture, matt or subopaque; pronotum with
two spines; metanotal suture indistinct or not visible, often two
teeth between the petiole spines; propodeum not bordered; petiole
without hairs, the spines not recurved apically; propodeal spines
not recurved (like the horns of a chamois) or weakly recurved
upwards at their extremities, head without tubercles (laterally
behind the eyes); head and alitrunk with large reticulations which
are weak and more or less effaced [unlike those on armata],
rest finely and densely reticulo-punctate and matt as on the
gaster; pronotum strongly convex above; alitrunk spines quite
short, specially those on the pronotum; propodeal spines divergent
and curved outwards; petiole and gaster as in P. tubericeps
but the spines and specially the dorsal teeth much shorter; black,
matt; pubescence very short and extremely sparse; almost no erect
hairs; TL 4.8-5.8 mm.
Alitrunk of Polyrhachis armata type form - showing the "gross
and deep reticulo-puncturation" referred to in Forel's key.
The photograph is derived from
http://stri.discoverlife.org/mp/20q?search=Polyrhachis+armata&guide=Ants_Java.
The species is known from South East Asia. |
Photomontage
of specimens from Israel, Ein Gedi (Dead Sea Valley),
12.iv.1982, leg J Kugler identified by Prof J Kugler as lacteipennis,
sent to BT by Armin Ionescu. Other images can be seen in the
folder at
.
Taking the available information, which is surprisingly sparse
for a reportedly common Indian species, these specimens appear to
be quite distinct from lacteipennis.
Dorow (1995a: ) placed lacteipennis in the dives
species-group, of Subgenus Myrmhopla Forel;
.
P. dives from Singapore is clothed with pale golden
pubescence and all the others are from India south- and eastwards.
These have a weak but noticeable margination of the propodeum
and seemingly much stronger sculpturation of the the head,
alitrunk and petiole, i.e. more like armata. Structurally
they are more like the members of Dorow's Polyrhachis
crypteroceroides species group but those are all very small,
TL 5 mm (these have a TL of 6.25 mm) and have marginate genae,
plus a proximally transverse margin on the first gaster segment. |