Synopsis of Aenictus species groups and revision of the A. curra x and A. laeviceps groups in the eastern Oriental, Indo-Australian, and Australasian regions (Hymenoptera: Formicidae: Aenictinae)
Author
Jaitrong, Weeyawat
Author
Yamane, Seiki
text
Zootaxa
2011
3128
1
46
journal article
45801
10.5281/zenodo.207090
a51dd241-f273-4211-8dd3-e2fd556a8e43
1175-5326
207090
Aenictus pachycerus
group
Diagnosis.
Antenna long, consisting of 10 segments; scape long, reaching or extending beyond posterolateral corner of head. Anterior clypeal margin roundly convex in the middle, lacking denticles. Mandible triangular, with very dense punctures; its masticatory margin with a large and sharp apical tooth followed by 4–12 small inconspicuous denticles, which gradually reduce in size toward basal angle of mandible. Frontal carinae fused at the level of antennal base to form a single carina, and extending less than half length of head, and well developed anteriorly and poorly developed posteriorly; parafrontal ridge present, reaching less than half length of head; seen in profile its anteriormost part well developed and raised as a subtriangular process. Occipital margin forming a collar or carina. Promesonotum distinctly convex or very weakly convex dorsally and sloping gradually to propodeum; propodeal junction angular; declivity of propodeum concave, encircled with a rim. Subpetiolar process weakly developed.
Head entirely sculptured or smooth and shiny. Petiole and postpetiole densely punctate in at least Southeast Asian species. First gastral segment entirely smooth and shiny, or rarely superficially shagreened, except the base of the tergite and sternite that has small, dense punctures. Body black, dark or reddish brown to light or yellowish brown;
typhlatta
spot absent.
Remarks.
The
A. pachycerus
group consists of relatively large species in terms of body size (TL
3.20–4.65 mm
).
Wilson (1964)
pointed out that this group is closely related to the
A. philippinensis
group, but can be distinguished from the latter by the mesonotum not visibly demarcated from the mesopleuron, and the metanotal groove almost absent or indistinct (mesopleuron clearly demarcated from metapleuron by a deep groove and from promesonotum by a distinct carina and metanotal groove relatively deep and distinct in the latter). This species group is also related to the
A. hottai
group in having developed frontal carina and parafrontal ridge. See under the
A. hottai
group.
Distribution.
India
,
Sri Lanka
, S.
China
,
Vietnam
,
Thailand
, Malay Peninsula (S.
Thailand
and W.
Malaysia
), Sumatra, Borneo (Sabah,
Sarawak
,
Brunei
, and E. Kalimantan),
Philippines
, New
Guinea
(
Papua
), and
Australia
(Queensland).
Currently valid names for the Oriental, Indo-Australian, and Australasian forms.
A. aitkenii
Forel, 1901
;
A. aratus
Forel, 1900
;
A. bobaiensis
Zhou et Chen, 1999
;
A. carolianus
Zettel et Sorger, 2010
;
A. chapmani
Wilson, 1964
;
A. dentatus
Forel, 1911
;
A. levior
(Karavaiev, 1926)
;
A. nesiotis
Wheeler et Chapman, 1930
;
A. pachycerus
(Fr. Smith, 1858)
;
A. philiporum
Wilson, 1964
;
A. powersi
Wheeler et Chapman, 1930
;
A. prolixus
Shattuck, 2008
;
A. puensis
Forel, 1901
;
A. reyesi
Chapman, 1963
.