| Literature DB >> 32148428 |
Wendy Y Wang1, Aiki Yamada2, Seiki Yamane3.
Abstract
The maritime trap-jaw ant Odontomachus malignus Smith, 1859 is thought to be widespread throughout islands in the Indo-Pacific and parts of the Oriental realm. Because of its unique nesting preference for harsh littoral habitat and distinct morphology, O. malignus has usually been assumed to consist of only one species. We, however, describe a new species similar to O. malignus found in the mangroves of Singapore, Southeast Asia - Odontomachus litoralis sp. nov. We find strong evidence of both species existing in (near) sympatry, and also distinct morphological differences between O. malignus and the new species. Additional complementary DNA evidence in the form of COI barcodes (313 bp) supporting putative species identification and delimitation is provided. Defining morphological characteristics for the O. malignus species group (nested within the larger O. infandus clade) are given in detail for the first time. The worker and queen castes of the new species are described; a redescription of the worker caste of O. malignus, based on specimens from Singapore and the Philippines in addition to the holotype, is also given. The males of both species are also described for the first time, including male genitalia. A preliminary key to most known species of the O. infandus group based on the worker caste is provided. Wendy Y. Wang, Aiki Yamada, Seiki Yamane.Entities:
Keywords: inter-tidal ants; littoral habitat; mangroves; sympatric species; systematics
Year: 2020 PMID: 32148428 PMCID: PMC7052037 DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.915.38968
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Zookeys ISSN: 1313-2970 Impact factor: 1.546
Summary of specimen data associated with COI sequences used in objective clustering.
| Species | Specimen identifier/catalogue no. | GenBank accession no. | Geographic origin of specimen | Caste/sex |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ZRC_ENT00000917.1 |
| Singapore | Worker |
| ZRC_ENT00000917.2 |
| Singapore | Worker | |
| ZRC_ENT00000917.3 |
| Singapore | Worker | |
| ZRC_ENT00000917.4 |
| Singapore | Worker | |
| ZRC_ENT00000917.5 |
| Singapore | Queen | |
| ZRC_ENT00000917.6 |
| Singapore | Male | |
| Sp. BOR002, MJ19771 |
| Sarawak, Borneo | Worker | |
|
| ZRC_BDP0014432 |
| Singapore | Male |
| ZRC_BDP0014442 |
| Singapore | Male | |
| ZRC_BDP0014515 |
| Singapore | Male | |
| ZRC_BDP0014516 |
| Singapore | Male | |
| ZRC_BDP0014535 |
| Singapore | Male | |
| ZRC_BDP0014676 |
| Singapore | Male | |
| ZRC_BDP0014677 |
| Singapore | Male | |
| ZRC_BDP0014712 |
| Singapore | Male | |
| ZRC_BDP0014733 |
| Singapore | Male | |
| ZRC_BDP0016086 |
| Singapore | Male | |
| MJ13287 |
| Palau | Worker | |
| USNMENT01124387 |
| Philippines | Worker | |
|
| ZRC_BDP0016035 | nil | Singapore | Worker |
|
| ZRC_BDP0012747 | nil | Singapore | Worker |
| ZRC_BDP0012737 | nil | Singapore | Male | |
|
| ZRC_BDP0016524 | nil | Singapore | Male |
| ZRC_BDP0016500 | nil | Singapore | Male |
Figure 1.Cluster dendrogram of COI (313 bp) barcodes of and from (near) sympatric populations in Singapore, specimens collected from Borneo (KU146009.1), Palau (KU146082.1), and the Philippines (KU504894.1), and additional reference barcodes of , , and . Nodes are annotated with numbers indicating percentage (%) uncorrected p-distance thresholds at which sequences diverge.
Figure 2.Paratype worker of sp. nov. A Head in full face view B mesosoma in dorsal view C head in lateral view D mesosoma in lateral view E closeup of petiole in lateral view F gaster in lateral view. Red arrows on A, C indicate protuberances on head dorsum. White arrow on B indicates tubercle-like projection of the strongly developed anteroventral margin of mesopleuron.
Figure 3.Paratype queen of . A Head in full face view B mesosoma in dorsal view C mesosoma in lateral view D closeup of petiole in lateral view E gaster in lateral view F forewing G hindwing.
Figure 4.Non-type male of (ZRC_ENT00007636.1, Singapore: Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve). A Head in full face view B head in lateral view C head in dorsal view D mesosoma in lateral view E mesosoma in dorsal view F closeup of petiole in lateral view G gaster in lateral view H closeup of gastral apex in lateral view I forewing J hindwing.
Figure 5.Genitalia of male, non-type (ZRC_ENT00007636.1, Singapore: Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve). A Pygostyle in dorsal view B abdominal sternite IX in ventral view C paramere and volsella, right side, inner view D penisvalva, left side, outer view. Abbreviations: (for B, C) Cu – cuspis; Di – digitus; Tm – telomere; Bm – basimere; BmC – carina of lower basimere; Sp – spiculum; Vo – volsella. (for D) ADL – apicodorsal lobe; AP – apicoventral process; AVP – anteroventral process; DS – diagonal sclerotisation; SAL – subapical lamina; Vc – valviceps; Vu – valvura.
Figure 6.Holotype worker of . A Head in full face view B mesosoma in dorsal view C head in lateral view D mesosoma in lateral view E closeup of petiole in lateral view F gaster in lateral view.
Figure 7.Non-type worker of (ZRC_HYM0000902, Singapore: Lim Chu Kang mangrove). A Head in full face view B mesosoma in dorsal view C head in lateral view D mesosoma in lateral view E closeup of petiole in lateral view F gaster in lateral view.
Figure 8.Non-type male of (ZRC_BDP0014535, Singapore: Pulau Semakau, old mangrove forest). A Head in full face view B head in lateral view C head in dorsal view D mesosoma in lateral view E mesosoma in dorsal view F closeup of petiole in lateral view G gaster in lateral view H closeup of gastral apex in lateral view I forewing J hindwing.
Figure 9.Genitalia of male, non-type (ZRC_BDP0014515, Singapore: Pulau Semakau, old mangrove forest). A Pygostyle in dorsal view B abdominal sternite IX in ventral view C paramere and volsella, right side, inner view D penisvalva, left side, outer view. Abbreviations: (for B, C) Cu – cuspis; Di – digitus; Tm – telomere; Bm – basimere; BmC – carina of lower basimere; Sp – spiculum; Vo – volsella. (for D) ADL – apicodorsal lobe; AP – apicoventral process; AVP – anteroventral process; DS – diagonal sclerotisation; SAL – subapical lamina; Vc – valviceps; Vu – valvura.
Figure 10.A Distribution of and in Singapore B map of intertidal and terrestrial habitat types in Pulau Semakau (by Feng Yikang, for RMBR [Raffles Museum of Biodiversity Research]) and locations where males were collected (indicated by red-filled circles).
Figure 11.Map of current known distribution of and .
| 1 | Vertex posteriorly with protuberance on each side of median furrow. Mesopleuron with anteroventral margin that is strongly developed and looks like a tubercle when seen in dorsal view |
|
| – | Vertex without such protuberance. Anteroventral margin of mesopleuron less developed, not like tubercle when seen in dorsal view |
|
| 2 | Propodeal junction strongly angulate, with dorsum separated from declivity by strong transverse carina. Mesosoma uniformly dark reddish brown. Body sculpture stronger; lateral face of pronotum coarser than that on dorsal face and less shiny. [Singapore, Borneo] |
|
| – | Propodeal junction rounded, with more weakly carinate edge. Pronotum paler than rest of mesosoma. Body sculpture weaker; sculpture on lateral face of pronotum similar to or weaker than that on dorsal face, and interspaces mostly smooth and shiny. [Singapore, Borneo, Lesser Sundas to Oceania] |
|
| 3 | First gastral tergite entirely micropunctate, covered with dense, short appressed hairs, without flattened area and pit. Dorsum of head and almost entire mesosoma with dense erect or suberect hairs that are very short and of almost same length. Pronotal dorsum without long erect hairs. [Vietnam] |
|
| – | First gastral tergite essentially smooth and shiny (punctation, if any, very faint and sparse), anteriorly extensively flattened and often with pit corresponding to petiolar spine. Condition of short hairs on head and mesosoma variable, but hairs may be longer, appressed, curved, or much sparser depending on species. Pronotal dorsum occasionally with one or two pairs of long hairs. |
|
| 4 | Head orange-yellow to yellowish brown contrasting with dark brown to blackish mesosoma. |
|
| – | Body generally concolourous, but sometimes head, especially lateral faces, lighter than rest of body |
|
| 5 | Gaster dark brown. Mesosoma with dense decumbent to appressed hairs that are relatively long (generally much longer than space between hairs). Anterior face of petiole with similar hairs that are often suberect. Dorsum of head posteriorly with superficial sculpture and somewhat shiny. Lateral face and basal part of anterior face of petiole with distinct striae |
|
| – | Gaster light brown, similar to head in coloration. Hairs on mesosoma shorter (generally as long as or shorter than space between hairs). Hairs on anterior face of petiole very fine, appressed and less conspicuous. Dorsum of head posteriorly distinctly striate and matte. Petiole almost entirely smooth. |
|
| 6 | Dorsum of head behind ocular prominence entirely sculptured and matte. Mesopleuron entirely striate |
|
| – | Dorsum of head behind ocular prominence essentially smooth or very faintly sculptured and shiny. Mesopleuron extensively smooth and shiny |
|
| 7 | Striae on pronotal dorsum essentially longitudinal, rarely weakly concentric. Petiolar spine curved backward in lateral view |
|
| – | Striae on pronotal dorsum more distinctly transverse. Petiolar spine almost straight in lateral view |
|
| 8 | Body orangish light brown. Pronotal dorsum predominantly with regular transverse striae |
|
| – | Body reddish brown to dark brown. Pronotal dorsum in posterior 2/3 largely with longitudinal striae |
|
| 9 | With petiole in dorsal view spiracle distinctly protruding laterad. Entire extraocular furrow essentially smooth with very sparse minute punctures. With mesosoma in profile, dorsal outline weakly and broadly concave |
|
| – | With petiole in dorsal view spiracle not protruding laterad. Extraocular furrow predominantly smooth but with superficial striae at least partly. With mesosoma in profile, dorsal outline more straight |
|