A taxonomic revision of the Palaearctic members of the Formica rufa group (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) - the famous mound-building red wood ants
Author
Seifert, Bernhard
text
Myrmecological News
2021
2021-04-28
31
133
179
http://zoobank.org/0e55c0d7-531a-48d7-a078-148b96bd461d
journal article
10.25849/myrmecol.news_031:133
b9f36fb1-1c9d-4af8-96ca-d57973b94862
1997-3500
5582216
0E55C0D7-531A-48D7-A078-148B96BD461D
Formica angusticeps
STÄRCKE, 1947
Formica rufa
var.
angusticeps
STÄRCKE, 1947
[description, zoogeography]
The taxon was described from
the Netherlands
.
BOL-
TON (1995) considered the name as available. The title of the paper “De boreale form van de roode boschmier (
Formica rufa rufa
)” suggests that
STÄRCKE (1947)
intended to introduce the new name at infrasubspecific rank. Yet, the main text did not make it clear what his intention was. If the name is available, we can assume a synonymy with
Formica pratensis
based on the following argumentation. The
type
locality is in Hoge Veluwe (
51.08° N
,
5.83° E
,
38m
) – a sand dune area with interspersed moister parts. We have only four species of the
F. rufa
group potentially occurring in that region:
F. rufa
,
Formica polyctena
,
F. pratensis
, and
Formica truncorum
.
Formica truncorum
is extremely rare in
the Netherlands
and
STÄRCKE (1947)
would have noted the diagnostic pigmentation. Therefore, he would have referred to one of the other three species. The reported presence on extensor profile of tibiae of 5 - 11 setae which are erected by 30 - 45° clearly speaks against
F. rufa
,
F. polyctena
, or
F. polyctena
×
rufa
.
STÄRCKE (1947)
gave no data on pilosity on back of head but he compared his
F. angusticeps
with specimens of “
F. rufa rufa
” from the Norwegian coast near the Lofoten (
68° N
) and of “
F. rufa alpina
Santschi
” from the high Alps. For zoogeographical and morphological reasons, his specimens from the Lofoten obviously belonged to
Formica lugubris
and those from the high Alps to either
F. lugubris
or
Formica paralugubris
. These data implicate
F. angusticeps
to have a rich overall pilosity as it is typical for
F. pratensis
and to be hairier than in the hairiest
F. rufa
phenotypes.