Published December 31, 2011 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Aenictus ceylonicus

Description

Aenictus ceylonicus group

Diagnosis. Antenna 10-segmented; scape reaching or extending beyond half of head length, but not reaching the occipital corner of head in full-face view. Mandible linear; its basal and lateral margins almost parallel; masticatory margin with large apical tooth followed by medium-sized subapical tooth; between subapical tooth and basal tooth 0–6 small denticles present. With mandibles closed, a gap present between mandibles and anterior margin of clypeus. Anterior clypeal margin weakly concave or almost straight, lacking denticles. Frontal carina short and thin, reaching or slightly extending beyond the level of posterior margin of torulus; anterior curved extension of frontal carina reaching or extending beyond the level of anterior clypeal margin in full-face view; parafrontal ridge absent. Promesonotum usually convex dorsally and sloping gradually to propodeum. Subpetiolar process developed.

Head and first gastral tergite smooth and shiny. Body yellowish, reddish or dark brown; typhlatta spot absent.

Remarks. The A. ceylonicus group is a unique group easily separated from the other groups by the following characteristics: mandible linear; a gap present between mandibles and anterior margin of clypeus when mandibles are closed; anterior clypeal margin almost straight or feebly concave, lacking denticles. Our concept roughly agrees with Wilson’s (1964) definition of the “ ceylonicus group”, but three species, A. biroi, A. javanus and A. piercei, should be removed from his list since they have triangular mandibles and different conditions of the anterior clypeal margin. All these species belong to three different species groups.

Distribution. India, Sri Lanka, southernmost part of Japan (?), S. China, Taiwan, Vietnam, Thailand, Borneo (Sabah and Sarawak), Philippines, Aru Island, New Guinea (Papua), and Australia (Queensland).

Currently valid names for the Oriental, Indo-Australian, and Australasian forms. A. acerbus Shattuck, 2008; A. ceylonicus (Mayr, 1866); A. doryloides Wilson, 1964; A. exiguus Clark, 1934; A. exilis Wilson, 1964; A. fuchuanensis Zhou, 2001; A. henanensis Li et Wang, 2005; A. nganduensis Wilson, 1964; A. orientalis Karavaiev, 1926; A. schneirlai Wilson, 1964; A. thailandianus Terayama et Kubota, 1993; A. turneri Forel, 1900.

Notes

Published as part of Jaitrong, Weeyawat & Yamane, Seiki, 2011, Synopsis of Aenictus species groups and revision of the A. curra x and A. laeviceps groups in the eastern Oriental, Indo-Australian, and Australasian regions (Hymenoptera: Formicidae: Aenictinae), pp. 1-46 in Zootaxa 3128 on page 5, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.207090

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Family
Formicidae
Genus
Aenictus
Kingdom
Animalia
Order
Hymenoptera
Phylum
Arthropoda
Species
ceylonicus
Taxon rank
species

References

  • Shattuck, S. O. (2008) Review of the ant genus Aenictus (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) in Australia with note on A. ceylonicus (Mayr). Zootaxa, 1923, 1 - 19.
  • Wilson, E. O. (1964) The true army ants of the Indo-Australian area (Hymenoptera: Formicidae: Dorylinae). Pacific Insects, (3) 6, 427 - 483.
  • Zhou, S. (2001) Ants of Guangxi. Guangxi Normal University Press, Guilin, 255 pp.
  • Terayama, M. & Kubota, A. (1993) The army ant genus Aenictus (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) from Thailand and Veitnam, with description of three new species. Bulletin of the Biogeographical Society of Japan, (2) 48, 68 - 72.
  • Forel, A. (1900) Ponerinae et Dorylinae d Australie. Recoltes par MM. Turner, Froggatt, Nugent, Chase, Rothney, J. - J. Walker, etc. Annales de la Societe Entomologique de Belgique, 44, 54 - 77.