A synoptic review of the ants of California (Hymenoptera: Formicidae).
Author
Ward, P. S.
text
Zootaxa
2005
936
1
68
http://antbase.org/ants/publications/21008/21008.pdf
journal article
21008
Temnothorax rudis (Wheeler
1917a)
stat. reval.
,
comb. nov.
(Figure 10)
Leptothorax nevadensis subsp. rudis Wheeler
1917a: 508.
Six
syntype
workers,
Camp Curry, Yosemite
,
California
[
MCZC
] [Examined].
Note: original description also includes dealate queen, and cites the type locality as
Tenaya Canyon, Yosemite Valley
.
Incorrectly synonymized under
T. nevadensis
by Mackay 2000: 376.
Leptothorax rudis Wheeler
; Stuart and Page 1991: 375. Genetic study (
rudis
implicitly raised to species).
Comments. This is a distinct species that occurs sympatrically with
T. nevadensis
in many parts of northern and central California, without showing any sign of intergradation.
T. rudis
is readily distinguished from
T. nevadensis
by petiole shape. In
T. rudis
the petiole is broader in profile, with the anterior and posterodorsal faces meeting at approximately 90º, and the posterodorsal face declining gently (Fig. 10). In
T. nevadensis
the petiole is more slender in profile, with the anterior and posterodorsal faces forming an acute angle (Fig. 9). In addition
T. rudis
has coarser body sculpture and is lighter in color than
T. nevadensis
.
T. rudis
is common in mixed coniferous forests of California, up to about 1750m elevation. Colonies can be found in rotten wood, under stones, in fallen acorns, and in the leaf litter.
Bolton (1995) stated that
rudis Wheeler
1917a, then combined with
Leptothorax
, was a primary junior homonym of
rudis Mayr
1868c. Mayr’s species, a fossil taxon, was originally combined with
Macromischa
, however, and then later with
Nothomyrmica (Wheeler
1915i), prior to
Macromischa
being subsumed under
Leptothorax
. Mayr’s
rudis
was never treated as a species of
Leptothorax
, so no homonymy arises.