Generic Synopsis of the Formicidae of Vietnam (Insecta: Hymenoptera), Part II — Cerapachyinae, Aenictinae, Dorylinae, Leptanillinae, Amblyoponinae, Ponerinae, Ectatomminae and Proceratiinae
Author
Eguchi, Katsuyuki
Author
Viet, Bui Tuan
Author
Yamane, Seiki
text
Zootaxa
2014
3860
1
1
46
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3860.1.1
ceb30f74-c770-4952-859a-9d3a84a5e087
1175-5326
287059
FDFD1014-8DDA-4EED-A385-95FA4F964CFC
Brachyponera
Emery, 1900a
Taxonomy.
Brachyponera
was established as a subgenus of
Euponera
, and raised to genus by
Bingham (1903)
. It was then synonymized with
Pachycondyla
by Brown in
Bolton (1994)
, and assigned to the tribe
Ponerini (
Bolton 2003
)
. However, based on a recent molecular phylogenetic analysis (
Schmidt 2013
),
Schmidt & Shattuck (2014)
revived
Brachyponera
as an independent genus, and placed it under the
Odontomachus
genus group of the tribe
Ponerini
.
Morphology.
Workers of Vietnamese species have the following features (see also
Schmidt & Shattuck 2014
):
Worker monomorphic; body (excluding mesopleuron and metapleuron) covered with a dense fine pubescence, and sparsely with standing hairs; head in full-face view subrectangular; preoccipital carina inconspicuous dorsally and laterally; frontal lobes horizontal, relatively small, separated from each other just with a longitudinal sulcus; antennal scrobe absent; median portion of clypeus moderately convex, with anteromedian margin truncate or weakly concave; mandible triangular with ca. 8–10 teeth on masticatory margin; basal portion of mandible with a pit or groove dorsolaterally (but the pit/groove sometimes obsolete); antenna 12-segmented, gradually incrassate from segment III to XII; eye moderate in size, located on side of head relatively close to mandibular insertion; promesonotum forming a dome which is in lateral view distinctly higher than anterior border of propodeal dorsum; promesonotal suture completely separating pronotum from mesonotum; metanotal groove deeply impressed; mesonotum present as a distinct disc well margined anteriorly by promesonotal suture and posteriorly metanotal groove; mesopleuron separated well from mesonotum and metapleuron with distinct sutures, not divided by a transverse groove; propodeum unarmed; orifice of propodeal spiracle small and round; propodeal lobe almost absent; apicoventral part of foretibia without small simple spur behind a large pectinate spur; apicoventral part of mid and hind tibiae with a simple spur in front of a large pectinate spur; outer surface of middle tibia with normal pilosity only; petiole without anterior peduncle; petiolar node squamiform, in lateral view high and thin; subpetiolar process developed, anteriorly without a conspicuous round depression, posteroventrally with an acute angle or a pair of acute angles; girdling constriction between abdominal segments III and IV weak; anteroventral frange/carina of abdominal sternite III (prora) reduced and not externally visible; sting well developed.
Differentiation.
The worker of
Brachyponera
is most similar to that of
Pseudoponera
, but the latter lacks the basal mandibular pits, deep metanotal groove, and raised promesonotal dome. The worker of small species of
Brachyponera
are most similar in general appearance to that of
Hypoponera
, but in the latter the apicoventral part of the mid and hind tibiae lacks a smaller, simple spur in front of the pectinate large spur.
Vietnamese species (6 spp.).
Radchenko (1993a) described
Brachyponera mesoponeroides
from
Vietnam
(
type
locality: Cuc Phuong), and
Bolton (1995)
and
Schmidt & Shattuck (2014)
combined the species in
Pachycondyla
. However, Sk. Yamane’s examination of the
type
series suggests that the species belongs to
Hypoponera
. The problem will be solved in a future study.
B. nigrita
(Emery, 1895)
. Au (Ba Be, Ba Vi, Chua Yen Tu, Cuc Phuong, Tam Dao, Tay Yen Tu), Zry (Cat Tien).
B. jerdoni
(Forel, 1900)
. Rad (Cuc Phuong, nr. Ha Noi).
B. luteipes
(
Mayr, 1862
)
. Rad (Cuc Phuong).
B.
sp. eg-2 [cf.
B. luteipes
] (Ba Be, Ba Vi, Cuc Phuong, Sa Pa, Tay Yen Tu).
B.
sp. eg-3 [cf.
B. chinensis
(Emery, 1895)
] (Ba Vi, Cuc Phuong, Sa Pa, Tam Dao).
B.
sp. eg-4 [cf.
B. nigrita
] (Sa Pa).
Bionomics.
Pachycondyla
spp. usually occur in well-developed forests and other wooded habitats. They nest in rotting logs and wood fragments, and in litter and soil.