Taxonomy in the phylogenomic era: species boundaries and phylogenetic relationships among North American ants of the Crematogaster scutellaris group (Formicidae: Hymenoptera)
Author
Ward, Philip S.
Author
Blaimer, Bonnie B.
text
Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society
2022
194
893
937
journal article
10.1093/zoolinnean/zlab047
0024-4082
10115063
6144DD31-0F7B-4589-86A3-F40994452C9
CREMATOGASTER VERMICULATA
EMERY, 1895
(
FIG. 32
)
Crematogaster vermiculata
Emery, 1895: 286
. Two
syntype
workers, ‘Los Angeles’ (Pergande) (MSNG) (examined). One worker here designated
lectotype
(CASENT0923320). See comments below about type locality.
Crematogaster coarctata
subsp.
vermiculata
Emery
;
Creighton 1950: 209
.
Crematogaster vermiculata
Emery
;
Buren 1968: 91
, 112.
Senior synonym of
Crematogaster colei
Buren
,
C. opuntiae
Buren
and
C. rossi
Buren (
Morgan & Mackay 2017: 396
)
; here reversed.
Worker measurements (
N
= 10):
HW 0.67–0.85, HL 0.64–0.81, SL 0.52–0.63, WL 0.72–0.93, MtFL 0.56– 0.7, MSC 3–9, A4SC 9–20, PP-SL/HW 0.14–0.21, CI 1.01–1.08, OI 0.23–0.26, SI 0.72–0.78, MtFL/HW 0.79–0.84, SPL/HW 0.17–0.21, SPTD/HW 0.39–0.48.
Discussion:
This is a distinctive arboreal species of
Crematogaster
restricted to cypress and hardwood swamps of the south-eastern
United States
. It belongs to the
C. lineolata
clade, and its closest relatives are the Caribbean species,
C. lucayana
and
C. sanguinea
(
Fig. 1
). Workers of
C. vermiculata
are easily recognized by the striking rugulose sculpture on the promesonotum that imparts a vermiculate (worm-like) appearance, a feature not seen in any other species in the
United States
.
Crematogaster vermiculata
also has notably short scapes and legs (SI 0.72–0.78, SL/HL 0.75–0.82, MtFL/HW 0.79–0.84, MtFL/HL 0.84–0.89) and moderately conspicuous standing pilosity on the mesosoma (uo to four hairs on each pronotal humerus and one to three on the mesonotal declivity) and on the gaster (MSC 3–9, A4SC 9–20). The propodeal spines are relatively short and stout (SPL/HW 0.17– 0.21, SPL/WL 0.15–0.19) and, in dorsal view, inwardly curved and directed posterad (SPTD/HW 0.39–0.48). Although the
type
locality is Los Angeles,
California
, the
type
specimens agree in all respects with the wellknown swamp-inhabiting species of the south-eastern
United States
, and there is no species in
California
– or indeed in all of western North America – that matches
C. vermiculata
. Hence we concur with
Buren (1968)
and
Johnson (1988)
that the
type
locality cited in the original description (Los Angeles) is an error. This is by no means the only locality or labelling error that can be attributed to Pergande; see other examples cited by
Gregg (1969: 101)
,
Ward (2000: 89)
and
Wetterer (2015: 132)
.
Buren’s (1968)
findings were overlooked by
Morgan & Mackay (2017)
, who reverted to an outdated concept of
C. vermiculata
as a western Nearctic species, with outlying populations in southeastern
United States
, and they synonymized three western species (
C. colei
,
C. opuntiae
and
C. rossi
) under
C. vermiculata
. These three taxa are not closely related to
C. vermiculata
(
Fig. 1
), nor do they bear any close morphological resemblance to that species.
Type notes:
The
two syntype workers
of
C. vermiculata
are deposited in MSNG [not MHNG, as indicated by
Morgan & Mackay (2017)
] and are labelled ‘Los
Angeles
|Calif.’ and ‘
SYNTYPUS
|
Crematogaster
|ver miculata|det.
Emery
, 1895’. One of the
two workers
also has a label with ‘No.|372’. The latter worker has been designated
lectotype
.
There
are four similar workers in the USNM labelled ‘
Los
Angeles
|
Calif.
’, ‘
No.
|372’ and ‘
Collection
|
T Pergande’
, and one of these is additionally labelled ‘
Cremastogaster
|vermiculata|
Em.
(372)
Em.
’ in
Pergande’s
handwriting.
These
four workers
in USNM are not true types, since
Emery’s
(1895: 286) description is based on
two workers
only, but they appear to be part of the same series.
All
six workers
agree closely with
Emery’s
(1895) original description, particularly his mention of the almost parallel propodeal spines and the ‘peculiar worm-like sinuous wrinkled sculpture of the promesonotum’
.
Distribution and biology:
Crematogaster vermiculata
occurs from
North Carolina
to
Florida
and west to
Louisiana
and
Arkansas
. It is a strictly arboreal species, inhabiting cypress and hardwood swamps (
Johnson, 1988
;
Deyrup, 2017
).