Pheidole in the New World. A dominant, hyperdiverse ant genus.
Author
Wilson, E. O.
text
2003
Harvard University Press
Cambridge, MA
http://atbi.biosci.ohio-state.edu/HymOnline/reference-full.html?id=20017
book
20017
Pheidole senex Gregg
Pheidole senex Gregg
1952a: 1. Syn.:
Pheidole pilifera subsp. anfracta Cole
1952c: 278, synonymy by Cole 1953g: 298.
Types Mus. Comp. Zool. Harvard.
Etymology L
senex
, old, senior, possibly alluding to rugulose sculpture of head and mesosoma.
diagnosis A member of the "
pilifera
complex" of the larger
pilifera
group, comprising
calens
,
californica
,
carrolli
,
cavigenis
,
clementensis
,
creightoni
,
hoplitica
,
littoralis
,
micula
,
pilifera
,
polymorpha
,
rugulosa
,
senex
,
soritis
,
tepicana
, and
torosa
, which complex is distinguished by the following traits. Major: dorsal head surface extensively sculptured; occipital lobes transversely rugulose (or, in
carrolli
smooth, in
littoralis
foveate, and in
micula
and
soritis
carinulate), postpetiole from above diamond-shaped, trapezoidal, or spinose. Minor: eye medium-sized to large.
P. senex
is distinguished within the complex by the following combination of traits.
Major: large; mesonotal convexity subangulate in dorsal-oblique view, and descends steeply to metathorax in side view; petiolar node tapers to a point in side view; postpetiole from above spinose; sides of pronotum, mesonotum, and propodeum, longitudinally carinulate; anterior dorsal profde of head flat; cephalic pilosity short and erect.
Minor: entire dorsal surface of head except mid-section of clypeus longitudinally carinulate; all of mesosoma foveolate and opaque. Measurements (mm) Paratype major: HW 1.74, HL 1.86, SL 0.78, EL 0.22, PW 0.82. Paratype minor: HW 0.64, HL 0.66, SL 0.68, EL 0.14, PW 0.40. color Major and minor: light yellowish to reddish brown.
range West-central Arizona through New Mexico to the Texas Panhandle and southern Colorado; apparently rare.
Biology Gregg (1963) reports
P. senex
from Campo, Colorado, in short grass prairie nesting in clay under rocks at 1300 m. Cole recorded it in New Mexico from 2000 to 2700 m. At Springerville, Arizona, I found a colony under a rock in grassy desert. In the Texas Panhandle, Moody and Francke (1982) found two colonies, one beneath a stone and the other in open soil.
Figure Upper: paratype, major. Lower: paratype, minor. COLORADO: 14 km south of Campo, Baca Co., extreme southeastern Colorado (Robert E. Gregg). Scale bars = 1 mm.