Pheidole in the New World. A dominant, hyperdiverse ant genus.
Author
Wilson, E. O.
text
2003
Harvard University Press
Cambridge, MA, USA
http://atbi.biosci.ohio-state.edu/HymOnline/reference-full.html?id=20017
book
20017
Pheidole oxyops Forel
Pheidole oxyops
Forel 1908h: 377. Syn.:
Pheidole genalis Borgmeier
1929: 199, synonymy by Kempf 1964e: 58;
Pheidole oxyops subsp. regia
Forel 1908h: 378, synonymy by Kempf 1964e: 58.
Types Mus. Hist. Nat. Geneve; Mus. Comp. Zool. Harvard.
Etymology Gr
oxyops
, sharp-eyed or sharp-faced, allusion uncertain.
diagnosis A large (major Head Width 1.90 mm), reddish brown member of the
diligens
group easily distinguished as follows.
Major: head in side view elliptical, tapering equally toward the occiput and clypeus on opposite ends; antennal scape reaches much less than half the distance from eye to occipital corner; in dorsal-oblique view, the two lobes of the pronotum and mesonotal convexity present a profile of three equally spaced convexities, and the propodeal dorsum has a small convexity just anterior to the spine; in side view propodeal spine short, thin, and vertical to propodeal dorsal face; postpetiole from above conulate; no rugoreticulum present anywhere; anterior and parts of lateral margins of pronotum carinulate.
Minor: a neck and nuchal collar present; propodeal spine reduced almost to a denticle.
Measurements (mm) Syntype major: HW 1.92, HL 2.12, SL 1.06, EL 0.30, PW 0.80.
Syntype minor: HW 0.74, HL 1.02, SL 1.24, EL 0.22, PW 0.54.
Color Major and minor: concolorous light brown.
Range Kempf (1972b) and I have recorded
oxyops
, in addition to the type series from Paraguay, from Salta, northern Argentina, and Goias, Mato Grosso, Minas Gerais, and Sao Paulo in southeastern and central Brazil.
Biology
P. oxyops
occurs in cerrado (savanna) and the edges of semideciduous forest. In the region of San Antonio de Posse, Sao Paulo, Fernandes et al. (1994) found the species abundant along the forest edge and in cotton fields. In the latter it was very effective in removing adult boll weevils (Anthonomus grandis) from the ground, accounting in one study period for 90% of the predation due to ants, where predation by ants as a whole destroyed 20% of the weevils. Fernandes et al. use the name P. oliveirai, which I erroneously supplied from an early draft of the manuscript of my monograph; the specimens supplied me and hence the name I erected in manuscript fall under
oxyops
.
Figure Upper: syntype, major. Lower: syntype, minor. PARAGUAY: San Bernadino (Fiebring). Scale bars = 1 mm.