Additions to the taxonomy of the Afrotropical Tetramorium weitzeckeri species complex (Hymenoptera, Formicidae, Myrmicinae), with the description of a new species from Kenya
Author
Garcia, Francisco Hita
Author
Fischer, Georg
16CEBC67-ECE7-4FC4-B537-085F0E26E85A
Entomology, California Academy of Sciences, 55 Music Concourse Drive, San Francisco, CA 94118, U. S. A. Email: georgf 81 @ gmail. com & urn: lsid: zoobank. org: author: 16 CEBC 67 - ECE 7 - 4 FC 4 - B 537 - 085 F 0 E 26 E 85 A
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2014
2014-07-15
90
1
16
journal article
21981
10.5852/ejt.2014.90
170f489e-4f44-4283-8c5a-6a7426f72eeb
2118-9773
3836785
Synopsis of Afrotropical
T. weitzeckeri
species complex
Tetramorium bendai
Hita Garcia, Fischer & Peters, 2010
Tetramorium boltoni
Hita Garcia, Fischer & Peters, 2010
Tetramorium guineense
(
Bernard, 1953
)
Tetramorium humbloti
Forel, 1891
=
Tetramorium humbloti pembensis
Forel, 1907
=
Tetramorium humbloti victoriensis
Forel, 1913
Tetramorium mpala
Hita Garcia & Fischer
sp. nov.
Tetramorium renae
Hita Garcia, Fischer & Peters, 2010
Tetramorium sepultum
Bolton
, 1980
Tetramorium snellingi
Hita Garcia, Fischer & Peters, 2010
Fig. 2.
Petiolar node in lateral and dorsal views.
A
,
E
.
Tetramorium renae
Hita Garcia, Fischer & Peters
(CASENT0095412).
B
,
F
.
T. bendai
Hita Garcia, Fischer & Peters
(ZFMKHYM20096204).
C
,
G
.
T. philippwagneri
Hita Garcia, Fischer & Peters, 2010
(ZFMKHYM20096178).
D
,
H
.
T. mkomazi
Hita Garcia, Fischer & Peters, 2010
(ZFMKHYM20096087).
Tetramorium tanaense
Hita Garcia, Fischer & Peters, 2010
Tetramorium weitzeckeri
Emery, 1895
=
Tetramorium ebeninum
Arnold, 1926
=
Tetramorium escherichi
Forel, 1910
=
Tetramorium weitzeckeri edithae
(
Weber, 1943
)
=
Tetramorium weitzeckeri nigellus
(
Santschi, 1932
)
Notes on biogeography and identification
New material has become available since the last revision of the
T. weitzeckeri
species group (
Hita Garcia
et al
. 2010
); subsequently, the distribution ranges of a few species need to be adjusted. Fresh material from an ongoing inventory of the ant fauna of Gorongosa National Park in
Mozambique
revealed the presence of
T. humbloti
,
T. sepultum
and
T. weitzeckeri
. Even though their presence in
Mozambique
is not surprising, all three were previously unknown from that country.
Hita Garcia
et al
. (2010)
reported the absence of
T. humbloti
from
Kenya
, but some freshly identified material from the area around Nairobi clearly belongs to this species. The distribution range of
T. tanaense
is also larger than previously understood. It is now known from the forest of Arabuko Sokoke on the Kenyan coast, which is close to the
type
locality, and from Ndimba Forest Reserve located in south-eastern
Tanzania
close to the Indian Ocean.
Despite these new findings, the biogeographic composition of the complex has not changed significantly.
Tetramorium boltoni
,
T. guineense
,
T. renae
and
T. snellingi
are species found predominantly in the equatorial rainforest belt, whereas the species
T. humbloti
,
T. sepultum
and
T. weitzeckeri
are distributed in the drier eastern and southern parts of sub-Saharan Africa.
Tetramorium tanaense
seems to be endemic to the coastal forests of Eastern Africa in
Kenya
and
Tanzania
, and
T. bendai
is only known from one collection in
Burundi
(without any ecological information at all).
Tetramorium mpala
sp. nov.
also seems to have a very restricted distribution because it is only known from its
type
locality in Central
Kenya
.
In addition, several non-taxonomists have used the identification key published in
Hita Garcia
et al
. (2010)
and, fortunately, provided feedback to us. The key seemed to have worked mostly well, but users drew attention to some problems in the key not anticipated back in 2010. These problems were mainly located in the part of the key dealing with the
T. weitzeckeri
species complex, especially the separation of
T. guineense
from
T. weitzeckeri
. Some series of the latter species from
Tanzania
and
South Africa
possess strongly developed cephalic ground sculpture almost as distinct as seen in
T. guineense
, which causes difficulties with the key, even though both species are certainly not conspecific and differ in various aspects. Consequently, we have modified the identification key to include these users’ first-hand experience in order to make the discrimination of
T. guineense
from
T. weitzeckeri
easier, as well as several other minor changes throughout the key.