Taxonomy in the phylogenomic era: species boundaries and phylogenetic relationships among North American ants of the Crematogaster scutellaris group (Formicidae: Hymenoptera)
Author
Ward, Philip S.
Author
Blaimer, Bonnie B.
text
Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society
2022
194
893
937
journal article
10.1093/zoolinnean/zlab047
0024-4082
10115063
6144DD31-0F7B-4589-86A3-F40994452C9
CREMATOGASTER COLEI
BUREN, 1968
,
STAT. REV.
(
FIG. 20
)
Crematogaster colei
Buren, 1968: 108
.
Holotype
worker,
Wooten
,
Sacramento Mts.
,
New Mexico
,
7500 ft
,
4 July 1917
(Wheeler) (USNM) (
USNMENT00528846
) (examined).
Junior synonym of
C. vermiculata
:
Morgan & Mackay, 2017: 396
; here overturned.
Worker measurements (
N
= 12):
HW 0.73–1.06, HL 0.71–0.99, SL 0.68–0.89, WL 0.82–1.19, MtFL 0.71– 1.01, MSC 0–2, A4SC 0–11, PP-SL/HW 0.12–0.15, CI 1.03–1.09, OI 0.25–0.28, SI 0.82–0.92, MtFL/HW 0.94– 1.00, SPL/HW 0.21–0.26, SPTD/HW 0.48–0.60.
Discussion:
Morphological and phylogenomic data affirm that
C. colei
and
C. vermiculata
are distantly related, falling in the
C. opaca
clade and
C. lineolata
clade, respectively (
Fig. 1
).
Crematogaster colei
can be recognized by the features mentioned by
Buren (1968)
, particularly the relatively elongate scapes (SI 0.82–0.92, SL/HL 0.88–0.96) and well-developed hemilobes of the postpetiole that are sharply angulate in profile. This species is also characterized by relatively long legs (MtFL/HW 0.94–1.00, MtFL/HL 0.99–1.08), long propodeal spines (SPL/HW 0.21–0.26), sparse standing pilosity (MSC 0–2, A4SC 0–11) and predominantly reticulate-foveolate sculpture on the mesosoma, overlain by weak rugulae.
Crematogaster vermiculata
is different: it has relatively short scapes (SI 0.72–0.78), short legs (MtFL/HW 0.79–0.84), short propodeal spines (SPL/HW 0.17–0.21), more abundant standing pilosity (MSC 3–9, A4SC 9–20) and distinctive rugulose sculpture on the promesonotum (see further discussion under that species).
Crematogaster colei
is actually more similar to
C. californica
,
C. depilis
and
C. opuntiae
(see below) than to
C. vermiculata
. It can be distinguished from those three taxa by the longer legs (see measurements cited above, compared to MtFL/HW 0.80–0.91 and MtFL/HL
0.84–0.98 in
C. californica
,
C. depilis
and
C. opuntiae
) (
Fig. 42
), smaller eye size (ED/MtFL
0.26–0.28 in
C. colei
, compared to ED/MtFL
0.29–0.37 in
the other three taxa) and by the hemilobes of the postpetiole being weakly sculptured and sublucid (usually reticulatefoveolate and subopaque in the other three taxa). In addition, the postpetiolar seta is either absent or short in
C. colei
(PP-SL/HW 0–0.15) and usually present and longer (PP-SL/HW 0.12–0.21) in
C. californica
and
C. opuntiae
. For differences between
C. colei
and the newly described
C. detecta
, see under the latter species.
Figures 19–24.
Crematogaster
workers, showing lateral view of body (A), full-face view of head (B) and dorsal view of body (C). 19,
C. mutans
worker (CASENT0922736); 20,
C. colei
(CASENT0922726); 21,
C. detecta
holotype (CASENT0863461); 22,
C. larreae
paratype (CASENT0005943); 23,
C. depilis
(CASENT0005668); 24,
C. californica
lectotype (CASENT0923319). Images courtesy of
AntWeb
(www.antweb.org); photographers Wade Lee (19, 20), Zachary Griebenow (21), April Nobile (22, 23), Michele Esposito (24).
Distribution and biology:
Crematogaster colei
is a denizen of desert grassland and oak-pine-juniper woodland of the American South-West. It is known from west Texas, New
Mexico
, southern Utah, Arizona and northern
Mexico
. Colonies have been collected under stones and (once) in a dead branch of live oak.