Ants of the genus Lordomyrma Emery (1) Generic synonymy, composition and distribution, with notes on Ancyridris Wheeler and Cyphoidris Weber (Hymenoptera: Formicidae: Myrmicinae)
Author
Taylor, Robert W.
text
Zootaxa
2009
1979
16
28
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.274639
36e92c77-043b-4958-a2e9-bcb8ecb1dee4
1175-5326
274639
Lordomyrma
species of the
Fiji islands
The Fijian
Lordomyrma
were monographed and comprehensively illustrated by
Sarnat (2006)
, supplemented by
Lucky & Sarnat (2008)
. Five species additional to six recognized by W.M.
Mann
in the 1920’s were described. They constitute the species group of
L. rugosa
. Inclusion in
Lordomyrma
is readily confirmed by comparison of Figs 21-22 with those of
L. azumai
(
Figs 1, 2
),
L. cryptocera
(Figs 5, 6) and
L. infundibuli
(Figs 9, 10 - see also Sarnat’s (2006) figures). The group is significantly species-rich considering the size of
Fiji
. It evidences morphological variability much less spectacular than in the western Melanesian and New Caledonian faunas, and essentially as low as that of the Asian and Australian species. Nine of the twelve known species are from relatively well-collected
Viti
Levu, and two only from
Vanua
Levu.
L. tortuosa
is known from seven of eight investigated islands, and several
Viti
Levu species are widespread on other islands
Because of this high species richness and low morphological disparity, the Fijian species are of special interest relative to the very species-rich but additionally highly morphologically diverse faunas of lowland New
Guinea
and
New Caledonia
. These various faunas could well be important for analysis in comparative studies investigating the nature and mechanisms of speciation (generating species richness) and adaptive radiation (generating morphological and biotic diversity) among ants.
There seems likely to be relatively less interspecific competition between congeneric species in
Fiji
than in the more richly concentrated
Lordomyrma
faunas of lowland New
Guinea
and
New Caledonia
. These differences in relative species density might have influenced the levels of morphological divergence in the several faunas, as effects resulting from ecological displacement among related competing species. The two main Fijian Islands,
Viti
Levu and
Vanua
Levu, are together about as large as mainland
New Caledonia
- their areas are 4, 0 0 1 sq.mi. (c. 10, 360 sq.km.) and 2, 137 sq.mi. (c. 5, 535 sq.km.) respectively (
Robson 1963
).
The collection and study of Fijian
Lordomyrma
species (and those of other ant genera significantly species-rich on the islands - e.g.
Hypoponera
,
Leptogenys
,
Gnamptogenys
,
Strumigenys
,
Pheidole
,
Camponotus
and others, along with the endemic myrmicine genus
Poecilomyrma
) deserves special scientific attention, and highlights the need for more vigorous conservation of the remaining stands of native Fijian rain forest.