Anochetus armstrongi

[25] Anochetus armstrongi Samples of A.'armstrongi from eastern Australia usually have the striate sculpture of metanotum and propodeum very restricted, and the integument here mostly smooth and shining; the petiolar node tends to be thick at the apex, and in front view, the apical margin is on...

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Main Author: Brown, WL Jr.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 1978
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6284138
https://zenodo.org/record/6284138
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6284138
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Insecta
Hymenoptera
Formicidae
Anochetus
Anochetus armstrongi
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Insecta
Hymenoptera
Formicidae
Anochetus
Anochetus armstrongi
Brown, WL Jr.,
Anochetus armstrongi
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Insecta
Hymenoptera
Formicidae
Anochetus
Anochetus armstrongi
description [25] Anochetus armstrongi Samples of A.'armstrongi from eastern Australia usually have the striate sculpture of metanotum and propodeum very restricted, and the integument here mostly smooth and shining; the petiolar node tends to be thick at the apex, and in front view, the apical margin is only just barely emarginate, and the corners are broadly rounded. The largest specimens (HW up to 1.50 mm) are from the mallee country of northwestern Victoria (Duddo Wells, north of Murrayville, C. Barrett; Ultima, J. C. Goudie); the smallest eastern ones (HW 1.30-1.40 mm) are from Queensland (Roma, F. H. Taylor; 80-100 miles south of Sarina, P. F. and P. J. Darlington). The type series (ANIC-Canberra, MCZ, BMNH-London) is from Nyngan, central New South Wales (fig. 32). Western Australian samples tend to be smaller (HW down to 1.20 mm, or even slightly less), the striation is more extensive on the sides of the posterior trunk, and the petiolar node is thinner and more distinctly emarginate, thus raising the question as to whether the western populations may not represent a species separate from armstrongi. The samples vary so widely one to the next that I feel such a separation would be premature. This is a question that needs much more material. Present western series available: Toodyay, A. Douglas; Northam, P. McMillan; Mullewa, W. M. Wheeler. AH of the localities appear to lie in zones now agriculturally modified, but originally in dry sclerophyll woodland or mallee. The samples of A. rectangularis available (MCZ) are from New South Wales: Warrah, W. W. Froggatt. Queensland: Townsville, separate collections by F. P. Dodd and W. M. Wheeler; north of Mareeba, P. F. and P. J. Darlington; Lynd, 500 m, E. S. Ross and D. Q. Cavagnaro; 40 miles SW of Mt. Garnet, 750 m, Ross and Cavagnaro. The samples vary in color from light brownish-yellow to dark brown with blackish gaster. The head is often lighter and more yellowish than is the trunk. The variety diabolus as described by Forel corresponds to those samples with the petiolar emargination distinct, rendering the upper corners more marked; this condition is found in several series, and seems to be part of the infraspecific variation. Of A. turneri, I have studied only the types, from Mackay, Queensland (MHN-Geneva, MCZ), b,ut the variety latunei described by Forel seems to be only a slightly smaller, more lightly sculptured variant, not likely to be a distinct species. R. W. Taylor (in litt.) tells me that he has found A. rectangularis and A. turned to be "widespread in northern Australia", but relatively uncommonly collected. He has independently confirmed the synonymy of their two varieties. Taylor sends additional records of collections of this group in ANIC-Canberra: A. rectangularis (fig. 36); Queensland: near Dimbulah, 10 miles W of Charters Towers, 14 miles S of Maryborough, Homestead, Brisbane. Northern Territory: 5 km S of Cahills Crossing (12.23S, 132.51E), slopes above Baroalba Spring (12.47S, 132.51E). New South Wales: Bombala. Torres Strait: Prince of Wales Island. A. turneri (Fig. 33): Queensland: Hinchinbrook Island. Torres Strait: Prince of Wales Island. A. armstrongi: Victoria: Patho, Marysville, Bogan River. New South Wales: Euston, Riverina, Broken Hill, Finlay, 14 miles NW of Leeton, Callubri Station, Talbita, 14 miles N of Quambone. Queensland: St. George, Toobeah, Nindigully, Fletcher, 4 miles WNW of Yelarbon, Helenslee. Western Australia: Mt. Jackson, Weira. South Australia: Mt. Lofty, 25 miles WSW of Mulga Park Head Station. Taylor also writes of another possibly.undescribed species from northwestern Australia, previously placed in the AN1C collection with armstrongi. He says this form is "rather like paripungens" in structure and sculpture of trunk, "but is as big as armstrongi, with large eyes. It has longer scapes and more generally dispersed and abundant pilosity than do southwestern Australian armstrongi". This form has been taken at localities in the Hamersley Range, the Kimberleys, and in the Northern Territory: Johnston’s Lagoon, 23 miles SE of Newcastle Waters, Darwin). Taylor proposes and then rejects the hypothesis that these samples could be character-displaced armstrongi under the influence of partly sympatric populations of paripungens in the Darwin area, and perhaps elsewhere in the northwest. A. armstrongi in Western Australia as here defined is a southwestern species, not yet known to occur north of the Geraldton-Mullewa area. We must await samples from the vast reach of arid land between Mullewa and the Hamersleys in order to find out how armstrongi and the possibly undescribed species are related to each other and to paripungens. : Published as part of Brown, WL Jr.,, 1978, Contributions toward a reclassification of the Formicidae. Part VI. Ponerinae, tribe Ponerini, subtribe Odontomachiti. Section B. Genus Anochetus and bibliography., pp. 549-638 in Studia Entomologica 20 on pages 597-598
format Text
author Brown, WL Jr.,
author_facet Brown, WL Jr.,
author_sort Brown, WL Jr.,
title Anochetus armstrongi
title_short Anochetus armstrongi
title_full Anochetus armstrongi
title_fullStr Anochetus armstrongi
title_full_unstemmed Anochetus armstrongi
title_sort anochetus armstrongi
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 1978
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6284138
https://zenodo.org/record/6284138
long_lat ENVELOPE(-119.369,-119.369,55.517,55.517)
ENVELOPE(-45.633,-45.633,-60.600,-60.600)
ENVELOPE(-126.773,-126.773,54.428,54.428)
ENVELOPE(-99.001,-99.001,72.668,72.668)
ENVELOPE(168.517,168.517,-77.700,-77.700)
ENVELOPE(-60.750,-60.750,-72.000,-72.000)
ENVELOPE(12.200,12.200,64.931,64.931)
geographic Queensland
Homestead
Brisbane
Barrett
Prince of Wales Island
Mackay
Darlington
Bogan
geographic_facet Queensland
Homestead
Brisbane
Barrett
Prince of Wales Island
Mackay
Darlington
Bogan
genre Prince of Wales Island
genre_facet Prince of Wales Island
op_relation http://publication.plazi.org/id/6195622D95A73D1D80B80D4635AA90CB
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https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6284139
https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit
op_rights Open Access
Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal
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cc0-1.0
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
op_rightsnorm CC0
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6284138
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6284139
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6284138 2023-05-15T18:03:32+02:00 Anochetus armstrongi Brown, WL Jr., 1978 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6284138 https://zenodo.org/record/6284138 unknown Zenodo http://publication.plazi.org/id/6195622D95A73D1D80B80D4635AA90CB https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit http://publication.plazi.org/id/6195622D95A73D1D80B80D4635AA90CB https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6284139 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode cc0-1.0 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess CC0 Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Arthropoda Insecta Hymenoptera Formicidae Anochetus Anochetus armstrongi article-journal ScholarlyArticle Taxonomic treatment Text 1978 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6284138 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6284139 2022-04-01T12:39:03Z [25] Anochetus armstrongi Samples of A.'armstrongi from eastern Australia usually have the striate sculpture of metanotum and propodeum very restricted, and the integument here mostly smooth and shining; the petiolar node tends to be thick at the apex, and in front view, the apical margin is only just barely emarginate, and the corners are broadly rounded. The largest specimens (HW up to 1.50 mm) are from the mallee country of northwestern Victoria (Duddo Wells, north of Murrayville, C. Barrett; Ultima, J. C. Goudie); the smallest eastern ones (HW 1.30-1.40 mm) are from Queensland (Roma, F. H. Taylor; 80-100 miles south of Sarina, P. F. and P. J. Darlington). The type series (ANIC-Canberra, MCZ, BMNH-London) is from Nyngan, central New South Wales (fig. 32). Western Australian samples tend to be smaller (HW down to 1.20 mm, or even slightly less), the striation is more extensive on the sides of the posterior trunk, and the petiolar node is thinner and more distinctly emarginate, thus raising the question as to whether the western populations may not represent a species separate from armstrongi. The samples vary so widely one to the next that I feel such a separation would be premature. This is a question that needs much more material. Present western series available: Toodyay, A. Douglas; Northam, P. McMillan; Mullewa, W. M. Wheeler. AH of the localities appear to lie in zones now agriculturally modified, but originally in dry sclerophyll woodland or mallee. The samples of A. rectangularis available (MCZ) are from New South Wales: Warrah, W. W. Froggatt. Queensland: Townsville, separate collections by F. P. Dodd and W. M. Wheeler; north of Mareeba, P. F. and P. J. Darlington; Lynd, 500 m, E. S. Ross and D. Q. Cavagnaro; 40 miles SW of Mt. Garnet, 750 m, Ross and Cavagnaro. The samples vary in color from light brownish-yellow to dark brown with blackish gaster. The head is often lighter and more yellowish than is the trunk. The variety diabolus as described by Forel corresponds to those samples with the petiolar emargination distinct, rendering the upper corners more marked; this condition is found in several series, and seems to be part of the infraspecific variation. Of A. turneri, I have studied only the types, from Mackay, Queensland (MHN-Geneva, MCZ), b,ut the variety latunei described by Forel seems to be only a slightly smaller, more lightly sculptured variant, not likely to be a distinct species. R. W. Taylor (in litt.) tells me that he has found A. rectangularis and A. turned to be "widespread in northern Australia", but relatively uncommonly collected. He has independently confirmed the synonymy of their two varieties. Taylor sends additional records of collections of this group in ANIC-Canberra: A. rectangularis (fig. 36); Queensland: near Dimbulah, 10 miles W of Charters Towers, 14 miles S of Maryborough, Homestead, Brisbane. Northern Territory: 5 km S of Cahills Crossing (12.23S, 132.51E), slopes above Baroalba Spring (12.47S, 132.51E). New South Wales: Bombala. Torres Strait: Prince of Wales Island. A. turneri (Fig. 33): Queensland: Hinchinbrook Island. Torres Strait: Prince of Wales Island. A. armstrongi: Victoria: Patho, Marysville, Bogan River. New South Wales: Euston, Riverina, Broken Hill, Finlay, 14 miles NW of Leeton, Callubri Station, Talbita, 14 miles N of Quambone. Queensland: St. George, Toobeah, Nindigully, Fletcher, 4 miles WNW of Yelarbon, Helenslee. Western Australia: Mt. Jackson, Weira. South Australia: Mt. Lofty, 25 miles WSW of Mulga Park Head Station. Taylor also writes of another possibly.undescribed species from northwestern Australia, previously placed in the AN1C collection with armstrongi. He says this form is "rather like paripungens" in structure and sculpture of trunk, "but is as big as armstrongi, with large eyes. It has longer scapes and more generally dispersed and abundant pilosity than do southwestern Australian armstrongi". This form has been taken at localities in the Hamersley Range, the Kimberleys, and in the Northern Territory: Johnston’s Lagoon, 23 miles SE of Newcastle Waters, Darwin). Taylor proposes and then rejects the hypothesis that these samples could be character-displaced armstrongi under the influence of partly sympatric populations of paripungens in the Darwin area, and perhaps elsewhere in the northwest. A. armstrongi in Western Australia as here defined is a southwestern species, not yet known to occur north of the Geraldton-Mullewa area. We must await samples from the vast reach of arid land between Mullewa and the Hamersleys in order to find out how armstrongi and the possibly undescribed species are related to each other and to paripungens. : Published as part of Brown, WL Jr.,, 1978, Contributions toward a reclassification of the Formicidae. Part VI. Ponerinae, tribe Ponerini, subtribe Odontomachiti. Section B. Genus Anochetus and bibliography., pp. 549-638 in Studia Entomologica 20 on pages 597-598 Text Prince of Wales Island DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Queensland Homestead ENVELOPE(-119.369,-119.369,55.517,55.517) Brisbane ENVELOPE(-45.633,-45.633,-60.600,-60.600) Barrett ENVELOPE(-126.773,-126.773,54.428,54.428) Prince of Wales Island ENVELOPE(-99.001,-99.001,72.668,72.668) Mackay ENVELOPE(168.517,168.517,-77.700,-77.700) Darlington ENVELOPE(-60.750,-60.750,-72.000,-72.000) Bogan ENVELOPE(12.200,12.200,64.931,64.931)