Contributions toward a reclassification of the Formicidae. Part VI. Ponerinae, tribe Ponerini, subtribe Odontomachiti. Section B. Genus Anochetus and bibliography.
Author
Brown, WL Jr.,
text
Studia Entomologica
1978
20
549
638
http://antbase.org/ants/publications/6757/6757.pdf
journal article
6757
[20]
A. rufus
,
originally placed by Jerdon in
Odontomachus
, was accepted by Emery as an
Anochetus
. Though there is little in the description of diagnostic value, the size (" 1 -4th of an inch") and color, "head, thorax and legs rufous; abdomen dark brown", fit fairly well the type series of
A. mordax
, of which the type locality is Dohnavur, 300 feet,
"Tinnevelly"
(Tirunelveli) District, now in Madras State, India. The type locality for
rufus
as here restricted is Salem District, Madras State, about 300 km N of Tirunelveli. Jerdon also says of
rufus
that the petiole is "raised, pointed and conic", which
applies
better to a side view of
A. mordax
than to such other large
Anochetus
species from peninsular India as
kanariensis
or
sedilloti
.
Jerdon also refers to a larger (11/24 inch) ant from Wynaad District (Kerala State) with finely striated thorax and "teeth of the jaw blunt" as a possible
"warrior"
caste of
rufus
, but this description evidently refers to
Odontomachus simillimus
, which I found to be abundant in Wynaad in 1969.
While it seems impossible to be certain that
rufus
and
mordax
refer to the same biological species, acceptance of this synonymy does no violence to the known facts, and it settles a nomenclatorial problem that has persisted in the literature for many years.