A taxonomic study of the Brazilian turtle ants (Formicidae: Myrmicinae: Cephalotes)
Author
Oliveira, Aline Machado
Author
Powell, Scott
Author
Feitosa, Rodrigo Machado
text
Revista Brasileira de Entomologia
2021
2021-09-13
65
3
e 20210028
1
52
http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1806-9665-rbent-2021-0028
journal article
4261
10.1590/1806-9665-RBENT-2021-0028
69cf944a-43de-4eeb-bdd7-3dee10cde70c
5512220
Theatratus
speciesgroup
(
Figs. 17
,
18
)
The
atratus
group was proposed for the first time by De Andrade and Baroni Urbani (1999). Before that, the species
C. alfaroi
,
C. atratus
and
C. serraticeps
belonged tothe genus
Cephalotes
, while the species
C.oculatus
,
C.opacusandC
.placidus belongedto thegenusEucryptocerus. The species
C. alfaroi
was not included in this study since it does not occur in
Brazil
. In the morphological phylogeny by De Andrade and Baroni Urbani (1999, see their
Fig. 24
), the Central American hamulus group is the sister group of all other groups in
Cephalotes
, followed by
theatratus
group. In the recent molecular phylogenies (Price et al., 2014, 2016, see their
Fig.
S
3
) this relationship isinverse, and
theatratus
group is the sister-mostgroup in the topology (
Fig. 54
).
Theatratus
and hamulus groups share the absenceof the soldier caste in some species of
atratus
and all species of hamulus. The species
C. alfaroi
,
C. opacus
, and
C. serraticeps
have known soldiers, while the species
C. atratus
,
C. oculatus
, and
C. placidus
do not have soldiers, as far as we know. Of these, large colony series ofC.
atratus
have revealed that while this species certainly lacks morphologically differentiated soldiers and any pronounced allometric morphological scaling, the worker caste is highly variable insize within mature colonies (Corn, 1980). This species is broadly distributed, and frequently collected (
Fig. 18
), and is the second most common species of the genus in
Brazil
, after
C. pusillus
. The other species without soldiers are not highly variable in size, and their distribution is more restricted (Amazon/Atlantic Forest (
Fig.18
)).
Diagnosis:
In workers and soldiers vertexal corners of head, in lateral view, with a pair of spines (
Fig. 2a
). Pronotum always with a pair of long dorsolateral spines; a pair of short median spines can be present in some species, sometimes weakly developed. Postoccipital carinae with ventral expansions (
Fig. 17
a-b).
Brazilian species of
atratus
group
Cephalotes atratus (Linnaeus, 1758)
Obsolete combinations:Cryptocerus
atratus
,
Formica
atrata =
Cephalotes atratus crassispina Santschi, 1920
=
Cephalotes atratus
erectus Kempf, 1951 =
Cephalotes atratus nitidiventris Santschi, 1920
=
Cephalotes atratus
quadridens (De Geer, 1773) Obsolete combinations:
Cephalotes
quadridens,
Formica
quadridens =
Cephalotes atratus
rufiventris (Emery, 1894) Obsolete combination: Cryptocerus
atratus
rufiventris =
Cephalotes
dubitatus (Smith, 1853) Obsolete combination: Cryptocerus dubitatus =
Cephalotes marginatus (Fabricius, 1804)
new synonym
Obsolete combination: Cryptocerus
marginatus
Cephalotes oculatus (Spinola, 1851)
Obsolete
combination: Cryptocerus
oculatus
=
Cephalotes
aethiops (Smith, 1853) Obsolete combination: Cryptocerus aethiops
Cephalotes opacus Santschi, 1920
=
Cephalotes abdominalis Santschi, 1929
Cephalotes placidus (Smith, 1860)
Obsolete
combination: Cryptocerus
placidus
=
Cephalotes
fenestralis (Smith, 1876) Obsoletecombination: Cryptocerus fenestralis.
Cephalotes serraticeps (Smith, 1858)
Obsolete
combination: Cryptocerus
serraticeps
Note:
The synapomorphiesso far accepted for
C.marginatus
include abundant suberect pilosity onthefirst gastral sternite, instead of sparse as in
C. atratus
, and median pronotal spines at least with ¼ of the size of the dorsolateral ones, instead of minute or absent as in
C. atratus (De Andradeand Baroni Urbani, 1999)
.
Cephalotes marginatus
was described by Fabricius (1804), synonymized under
C. atratus
by Klug (1824), and then revived by De Andrade and Baroni Urbani (1999). In the latter study, the species
C. decemspinosus Santschi, 1920
was synonymizedunder
C.marginatus
. Kempf (1951) has already argued that the status of this species should be changed, as there were individuals in series of
C. atratus
with the same characteristics of
C. decemspinosus
.
After a careful examination of both species based on specimens from a wide range of distribution, we found great variation of the putative synapomorphic characters of
C. marginatus
among samples of
C. atratus
.
Cephalotes marginatus
is known only for the Amazonian arch in South America, while
C. atratus
is widely distributed from
Mexico
to north of
Argentina
and isone of the most commonly sampled species of
Cephalotes
.
Therefore, consideringmorphological and geographic evidence, we here propose the synonymy of
C. marginatus
under
C. atratus
.
Key to the identification of Brazilian species of the
atratus
group of
Cephalotes
based on workers and soldiers
(
Figs. 17
a-g)
1 In lateral view, eyes positioned ventrally to the antennal scrobes (
Fig. 17a
)...................................................................................................................2
1’ In lateral view, eyes positioned posteriorly the antennal scrobes (
Fig. 17b
)..................................................................................................................3
2 Body shiny. In lateral view, postpetiolar dorsal spines shorter than the subpostpetiolar process (
Fig. 17d
).............................................
C.atratus
2’ Body opaque. In lateral view, postpetiolar dorsal spines longer than the subpostpetiolar process (
Fig. 17e
)…............................….
C. serraticeps
3 In dorso-oblique view, dorsal and lateral faces of mesonotum and propodeum meeting in a carina, not necessarily extending to the propodeal spines (
Fig. 17f
)...............................................................
C. oculatus
3’ In dorso-oblique view, dorsal and lateral faces of mesonotum and propodeum continuous, without carina (
Fig.
17g
)....................................4
4 Propodeal spines shorter than the declivous face of propodeum (
Fig. 17c
)....................................................................................................
C.opacus
4’ Propodeal spines longer than the declivous face of propodeum (
Fig. 17d, e
)............................................................................................
C. placidus