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 laeviceps
group
Diagnosis.
Head in full-face view with occipital corner rounded; occipital margin forming a carina. Antenna 10- segmented; antennal scape relatively long, usually attaining posterior corner of head. Anterior clypeal margin roundly convex, bearing 5–12 denticles. Mandible subtriangular; its masticatory margin with a large apical tooth followed by a medium-sized subapical tooth and 5–8 denticles. Frontal carina short, extending slightly beyond posterior margin of torulus; parafrontal ridge feeble and incomplete or almost absent. With mesosoma in profile promesonotum convex dorsally and sloping gradually to metanotal groove. Legs slender; subpetiolar process well developed, triangular; its apex usually directed backward and downward.
Head and first gastral segment entirely smooth and shiny. Body black, dark brown to reddish brown;
typhlatta
spot present, usually located anterior to occipital corner.
Remarks.
Our concept agrees well with Wilson’s (1964) definition of the “
laeviceps
group”. This group is closely related to the
A. currax
group and
A. leptotyphlatta
group (see under
A. currax
group). The
A. laeviceps
group is distinguished from the latter two by the following characteristics: anterior clypeal margin roundly convex with several denticles; head in full-face view with occipital corner rounded; in profile
typhlatta
spot usually located anterior to occipital corner; subpetiolar process well developed, with the apex directed downward and backward.
Distribution.
India
,
Vietnam
,
Cambodia
,
Thailand
, Malay Peninsula (S.
Thailand
and W.
Malaysia
), Sumatra, Borneo (Sabah,
Sarawak
,
Brunei
, and E. Kalimantan), Java,
Philippines
, and Sulawesi.
Currently valid names for the Oriental, Indo-Australian, and Australasian forms.
A. alticola
Wheeler et Chapman, 1930
;
A. binghami
Forel, 1900
;
A. bodongjaya
Jaitrong et Yamane
,
sp. nov.
;
A. breviceps
Forel
,
stat nov.
;
A. brevinodus
Jaitrong et Yamane
,
sp. nov.
;
A. fergusoni
Forel, 1900
;
A. fulvus
Jaitrong et Yamane
,
sp. nov.
;
A. hodgsoni
Forel, 1900
;
A. laeviceps
(Smith, 1858)
;
A. luzoni
Wheeler et Chapman, 1925
;
A. montivagus
Jaitrong et Yamane
,
sp. nov.
;
A. rotundicollis
Jaitrong et Yamane
,
sp. nov.
;
A. siamensis
Jaitrong et Yamane
,
sp. nov.
;
A. sonchaengi
Jaitrong et Yamane
,
sp. nov.