A catalogue of the ants of Paraguay (Hymenoptera: Formicidae)
Author
Wild, Alexander L.
text
Zootaxa
2007
1622
1
55
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.179222
9584df9a-a4a2-49bb-a256-cb99776f4dc8
1175-5326
179222
Camponotus pellitus
Mayr 1862
.
REVISED STATUS
.
Camponotus pellitus
Mayr 1862:668
. [
holotype
w examined, NHMW;
Brazil
]
Camponotus pellitus
var.
scintillans
Forel 1901e: 72
.
NEW SYNONYMY.
[w
syntypes
examined, MHNG;
Paraguay
(Jerrmann)]
Camponotus blandus
Emery
(nec F. Smith) 1903: 67 (part). Misidentification.
Camponotus
(
Myrmamblis
)
pellitus
Mayr. Bruch 1914: 229
.
Camponotus blandus pellitus
Mayr. Santschi 1922b: 111
.
Camponotus blandus
st.
scintillans
Forel. Santschi 1922b: 111
.
Camponotus
(
Myrmaphaenus
)
blandus
subsp.
scintillans
Forel. Emery 1925: 154
.
Camponotus
(
Myrmaphaenus
)
blandus
var.
pellitus
Mayr. Kempf 1972: 44
.
Camponotus
(
Myrmaphaenus
)
blandus scintillans
Forel. Kempf 1972: 45
.
The names associated with
Camponotus blandus
present one of the most difficult taxonomic problems in the Paraguayan fauna, and one that is particularly frustrating given the abundance of these ants in open habitats throughout the region. Multiple closely-related species certainly occur in
Paraguay
, but aside from Santschi’s
C. crispulus
(see separate discussion under that species), the taxonomic status of these forms is ambiguous and the arrangement in the present study is tenuous.
In eastern
Paraguay
, most collections are of dark-colored ants closely matching Mayr’s
type
of
C. pellitus
from
Brazil
and Forel’s
types
of
C. scintillans
from
Paraguay
. Workers from western
Paraguay
are almost universally bicolored with a red head and mesosoma and dark legs and gaster. The
major
workers of these chaco forms have finer suberect hairs on the sides of the head, spaced more densely, than do workers of
C. pellitus
, and the postero-lateral corners of the head of the largest workers are often more produced.
Minor
workers of the bicolored forms have smaller eyes than do minors of
C. pellitus
, and they have a slightly lower, less convex propodeum. Both forms co-occur in eastern
Paraguay
near the
Paraguay
River with little evidence of interbreeding. Forel’s
types
of
C. rosariensis
fall within the range of variation of these bicolored chacoan forms, so I adopt here a two-species scheme with
C. rosariensis
representing the bulk of the chacoan collections and
C. pellitus
representing most of the eastern collections.
The chacoan forms, while difficult to subdivide further on the basis of external worker morphology, show two distinct nest phenotypes in reproductively mature colonies. I have observed these nest forms within a few meters of each other. One form constructs large, conspicuous crater mounds while the other has cryptic nest entrances in the soil consisting of a single small hole with a slight scattering of excavated earth placed up to half a meter away, a pattern similar to the nests of
C. pellitus
. This sympatric difference in nesting behavior suggests the existence of cryptic species.
F. Smith’s
holotype
of
C. blandus
, a
minor
worker from Pará (BMNH, examined), is not a close match to any Paraguayan material. This ant has the smaller eyes and the lower propodeum more similar to
C. rosariensis
than to
C. pellitus
, but with denser pubescence on gastric tergites 3 and 4 (= abd. tergites 5 and 6) than in most specimens of
C. rosariensis
. The
C. blandus
type
is also colored differently, with the posterior portion of the head quite dark, as in
C. pellitus
, the mesosoma lighter, as in
C. rosariensis
, and the first gastric tergite concolorous with the mesosoma and infuscated posteriorly. However, I have not examined any material occurring between the
type
locality in Pará and
Paraguay
, so I cannot dismiss the eventuality that the name
C. blandus
may apply one of these subtropical populations.