Pheidole in the New World. A dominant, hyperdiverse ant genus.
Author
Wilson, E. O.
text
2003
Harvard University Press
Cambridge, MA
http://atbi.biosci.ohio-state.edu/HymOnline/reference-full.html?id=20017
book
20017
Pheidole orbica
Forel
Pheidole orbica
Forel 1893j: 415.
TYPES Mus. Hist. Nat. Geneve.
Etymology L
orbica
, circular, possibly referring to the semicircular profile of the promesonotum.
diagnosis A member of the "
flavens
complex" within the larger
flavens
group, consisting of
asperithorax
,
breviscapa
,
exigua
,
flavens
,
nuculiceps
,
orbica
, and
sculptior
, as well as the less similar
nitidicollis
and species placed close to it (see under
nitidicollis
), differing by the following combination of traits.
Major: occiput and entire body behind the head smooth and shiny; shallow antennal scrobes present, their surfaces partly carinulate and foveate and subopaque; a small patch of rugoreticulum present just laterad to the circular carinulae of the antennal fossae; longitudinal carinulae originating on the frontal lobes reach almost to the occiput, and those just mesad to the eye reach to halfway between the eye and occipital corner; promesonotum in side view forms a near-perfect semicircle; apex of petiolar node in side view acute.
Minor: except for sparse circular carinulae around the antennal fossae, head and body entirely smooth and shiny. Measurements (mm) Lectotype major: HW 0.82, HL 0.88, SL 0.42, EL 0.10, PW 0.38. Paralectotype minor: HW 0.40, HL 0.40, SL 0.36, EL 0.06, PW 0.24. Color Major: body variably brownish yellow to light reddish brown. Minor: body yellowish brown, appendages clear yellow.
range Known from St. Vincent, West Indies, and from Arroyo, Puerto Rico (J. A. Torres).
biology
P. orbica
may be a native species on St. Vincent and is likely local in distribution; Stefan Cover and I did not encounter it during a week's collecting on the neighboring island of Grenada. H. H. Smith (in Forel 1893j) found it rare on St. Vincent, in welldeveloped forest, nesting in pieces of rotting wood on the ground, under stones in the soil, or, in one case, beneath sod on a stone. Each colony contained several hundred individuals.
figure Upper: lectotype, major. Lower: paralectotype, minor. ST. VINCENT, WEST INDIES (H. H. Smith). Scale bars = 1 mm.