A taxonomic revision of the Cardiocondyla nuda group (Hymenoptera: Formicidae)
Author
Seifert, Bernhard
Author
Okita, Ichiro
Author
Heinze, Jürgen
text
Zootaxa
2017
4290
2
324
356
journal article
32712
10.11646/zootaxa.4290.2.4
3937c7f9-d611-4ce1-be9d-3d615adb919c
1175-5326
829077
AB23F5B8-8955-4BD6-9A23-9392EC275686
Cardiocondyla paranuda
Seifert 2003
Tab. 2
,
Figs. 14
–
16
Cardiocondyla paranuda
Seifert 2003
: 246
.
Holotype
worker: alledgedly
Tunisia
,
Chabania
[
SMNG
, antweb.org images of specimen
FOCOL
0739
] (examined)
.
Holotype
labels "
TUNISIA
: Medinine-
32 km
SE Chabania-
6 km
NW leg.
H.Heatwole
1976“, "
Holotype
Cardiocondyla paranuda
Seifert
", "GBIF-D/
FoCol
0
739 specimen
and label data documented", and "
Seifert (2017)
: Confusion of label by Collingwood. Terra Typica by morphometric analysis most probably Australia".
Material examined
A total of 30 nest samples with 52 workers were subject to NUMOBAT investigation.
FIGURE 14.
Gaster of
Cardiocondyla paranuda
in dorsal aspect. Australia: Kunoth Paddock [23.517°S, 133.210°E], leg. Greenslade 24 October 1974.
Australia
:
Australia
: without site and date,
holotype
of
C. paranuda
;
New
South Wales
: Barham, 1960.03.23, [-35.62, 144.15]
;
New
South Wales
:
Belanglo State Forest
, 1991.02.16, [-34.53, 150.25]
;
New
South Wales
:
Black Mountains
, 1997.xx.xx, [-35.28, 149.09]
;
New
South Wales
: Broken Hill, Parkland, 1971.05.18, [-31.96, 141,46]
;
New
South Wales
: Fowlers Gap, 1979.02.19, [-31.02, 146.60]
;
New
South Wales
:
Lake Menindee
, 1971.05.19, [- 32.32, 142.40]; Sydney, Concord, 1960.05.0 1, [-33.86, 151.10]
;
Northern
Territory
: Alice Springs, Kunoth Paddock, 1974.10.22,
No I
, [-23.517, 133.583]
;
Northern
Territory
: Alice Springs, Kunoth Paddock, 1974.10.24,
No I
, [-23.517, 133.583]
;
Northern
Territory
: Ayers Rock, 1981.10.xx, [-25.35, 131.03]
;
Northern
Territory
:
SW Katherine
, Manaulloo, 1978.04.xx, [-14.5, 132.2]
,
Northern
Territory
: Simpson Gap, 1972.xx.xx, [-23.71, 133.71]
;
Northern
Territory
: Ti Tree Well-
11 km
S, 1962.10.28, [-22.26, 133.38]
;
Northern
Territory
: above Baroalba springs, 1972.11.17, [-12.47, 132.51]
;
Northern
Territory
:
Yulara
, 2014.07.27,
No
AUS39 (GenBank
LT718213
) [- 25.24361, 130.98639]
;
Queensland
: Chilcott
Island
, 1967.08.xx, [-16.95, 149.91]
;
Queensland
: Chilcott
Island
, 1967.08.xx, [-16.25, 150.00]
;
Queensland
: Coongie-
25 km
S, 1975.08.xx, [-27.5, 140.0]
;
Queensland
: Cunnamulla, 1974.09.17, [-28.070, 145.67]
;
Queensland
: Woodstock-
52 km
S, 1976.04.11, [-20.07, 146.82]
;
South Australia
: Alton Down, Birdsville-
48 km
SW, 1972.xx.xx, [-26.28, 139.10]
;
South Australia
: Flinders Ranges, Elatina Hut
1 km
NW, [-31.35, 138.63]
;
South Australia
: Flinders Ranges, Westwloona-
14 km
WSW, [-31.50, 138.50]
;
South Australia
:
Flinders Range
, 1999.01.0 6, (GenBank
DQ
023068
) [-31.37, 138.63]
;
Western
Australia
:
Derby
City, 1982.xx.xx, [-17.31, 123.62]
;
Western
Australia
:
Eurardy station
, 2015.02.04/11, [-27.531, 114.667]
;
Western
Australia
: Perth: Kings Park, 1969.12.14, [-31.96, 115.87]
;
Western
Australia
:
Perth
, pre 1965 (coll.
J. Clark
), [-31.97, 115.840].
FIGURE 15.
Head of
Cardiocondyla paranuda
in dorsal aspect. Australia: Kunoth Paddock [23.517°S, 133.210°E], leg. Greenslade 24 October 1974.
Redescription of worker caste.
Worker (
Tab. 2
,
Figs. 14
–
16
): Head elongated, CL/CW 1.214. Postocular distance rather large, PoOc/CL 0.463. Eyes relatively small, EYE 0.234. Frontal carinae immediately caudal of the FRS level parallel or very slightly converging. Foveolae on vertex without interspaces, deeply impressed, with 13
–
19 µm diameter, and with an inner corona (a flat tubercle) of 7
–
9 µm diameter having the base of a decumbent pubescence hair in its center. This
type
of sculpture can also be described as a strongly sculptured microreticulum. Longitudinal sculpture on vertex often completely absent (
Fig. 15
). Weak semicircular rugae are found around the antennal fossae. Lateral mesosoma on whole surface regularly and strongly microreticulate-foveolate; longitudinal sculpture except for 4
–
6 weak and short carinulae on metapleuron completely absent (
Fig. 16
); dorsal mesosoma irregularly reticulate-foveolate-shagrinate. Sides of petiole with a deeply sculptured microreticulum, dorsal petiole and postpetiole with a weak and shallowly sculptured microreticulum. Cuticular surface of first gaster tergite rather smooth and shining but on its whole surface with a well-developed microreticulum (
Fig. 14
). The pubescence hairs on gaster tergites are the shortest within the
C. nuda
group, PLG/CS is only 5.06%. Metanotal depression very shallow, MGr/CS 1.28%. Propodeal spines short but clearly longer than in the
C. mauritanica
species complex. Dorsal propodeum sloping down to base of spines under an angle of 20°. Petiole node slightly longer than wide. Postpetiole in dorsal view with only suggestedly angulate sides and straight anterior margin that is slightly shorter than posterior margin; postpetiolar sternite bulging, without any protrusions but on each side with a suggested paramedian, longitudinal carina. Head, mesosoma, waist and appendages often amber-colored, gaster significantly darker—this is the most frequently observed coloration but populations with dark headed specimens or such with concolorous amber specimens do occur. For morphometric data of
52 workers
see
Tab. 2
.
FIGURE 16.
Cardiocondyla paranuda
in lateral aspect. Australia: Kunoth Paddock [23.517°S, 133.210°E], leg. Greenslade 24 October 1974.
Geographic range.
Australia, only species of the whole genus
Cardiocondyla
occurring in inner Australia.
Diagnosis.
see key. The very short gastral pubescence is the most obvious difference to the sister species
C. atalanta
.
Biology.
C. paranuda
is apparently well adapted to arid and very hot climate and the only species of the whole genus
Cardiocondyla
occurring in inner
Australia
. This is demonstrated by significant differences between
C. atalanta
and
C.paranuda
in the continentality of the sites. The mean distance from sea shore and mean annual rainfall are 23 ± 51 [0,252] km and 1430 ± 716 [500, 4500] mm in 27 sites of
C. atalanta
and 329 ± 332 [0, 904] km and 588 ± 385 [150, 1250] mm in 27 sites of
C. paranuda
. These differences are significantly different in both sea shore distance (ANOVA F1,52=22.39, p<0.0005) and annual rainfall (ANOVA F1,52=28.90, p<0.0005). As yet only foragers have been collected and colony structure, male morphology, and behavior are unknown.
Comments.
There
is a serious problem with the site documentation in the
holotype
of
C. paranuda
.
The
specimen was sent by
C.A. Collingwood
to the senior author in the 1980s with the labelling "
TUNISIA
: Medinine-
32 km
SE Chabania-
6 km
NW leg.
H.Heatwole
1976
“.
If
run as a wild-card in a LDA considering all 16 morphometric characters and collecting all samples of the
C. mauritanica
species complex in class 1 and all of the
C. nuda
complex in class 2, the
holotype
C. paranuda
is allocated to the
C. nuda
complex with p=1.0000.
This
is problematic because species of the
C. nuda
species complex are completely absent from the
West Palaearctic
and
North Africa
and it appears also most unlikely that ants from
Australia
should have been anthropogenically introduced to a site in the
Sahara
desert.
Furthermore
, NC-clustering places the
holotype
in a cluster of
C. nuda
group specimens that are treated as a single species that is restricted to the
Australian
continent and sister to
C. atalanta
(
Fig. 8
). A wild-card run in a LDA confirms this allocation with p=0.9916 (see section 4.4).
The
most probable explanation for this conflicting situation is a confusion of labels.
Harold Heatwole
collected in
North Africa
,
Tibet
and Australia—for instance, the two
C. paranuda
samples from
Queensland
:
Chilcott Island
in 1967 were taken by him.
He
usually gave his specimens to
Collingwood
stored in tubes with ethanol.
As
repeatedly witnessed by the senior author in personal contacts during laboratory work in
1982 and 1990
,
Collingwood
had the dangerous habit of placing similar ethanol-stored ants from different tubes side-by-side under the microscope for better comparison and sometimes he confused from which tube he had taken the specimens.
We
conclude that the
type
of
C. paranuda
has most probably been collected somewhere in
Australia
.