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PSYCHE

A Journal of Entomology

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This is the CEC archive of Psyche through 2000. Psyche is now published by Hindawi Publishing.

Roy R. Snelling and Stefan P. Cover.
Description of a new Proceratium from Mexico (Hymenoptera: Formicidae).
Psyche 99(1):49-53, 1992.

This article at Hindawi Publishing: https://doi.org/10.1155/1992/61849
CEC's scan of this article: http://psyche.entclub.org/pdf/99/99-049.pdf, 668K
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DESCRIPTION OF A NEW PROCERATIUM FROM MEXICO (HYMENOPTERA: FORMICIDAE)
Proceratium is a small genus of ectatommine Ponerinae con- taining fewer than three dozen known species, eight of which are found in the New World (Ward, 1988). That additional species remain to be discovered is evidenced by the new species described herein. We fully expect additional species to turn up in poorly col- lected forests of both the Old and New world tropics. The following abbreviations are used for measurements and ratios.
CI
- Cephalic index: (HWIHL) (100)
EL - Eye length: maximum eye length (diameter) HL - Head length: with head in full frontal view, maximum measurable distance between upper margin of vertex and lower margin of clypeus.
HW - Head width: maximum measurable head width, in frontal view, excluding eyes.
IGR - Index of gastral reflection: length of gastral sternum 2llength of gastral tergum 2 (Ward, 1988) SI
- Scape index: (SLIHL) (100)
SL
- Scape length: length of scape shaft, exclusive of basal condyle.
TL - Total length: combined head length, Weber's length, petiole length, and gastral length.
WL - Weber's length: diagonal length of mesosoma from pronotal slope to distal edge of propodeal lamellae. ' Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, 900 Exposition Boulevard, Los Angeles, Calif. 90007.
2 Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass. 02138. Manuscript received 12 July 1992
Pachc 99:49-54 (1992). hup Yipsychc einclub nrgWMJ-WI html



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Psyche
Proceratium tio, new species
Figure 1
Diagnosis. - Similar to P. goliath Kempf and Brown but differs in being smaller, with more prominent propodeal teeth, and in pos- sessing a distinctive spiniform subpetiolar process. In addition, P. tio has fewer than 10 erect hairs on the antenna1 scapes (vs. more than 20 for P. goliath), and the pilosity and pubescence on its scapes and upper body surfaces are shorter and much less dense than in P. goliath.
Description. - Holotype worker measurements (mm): HL (including clypeal lobe) 1.28; HW 1.18; SL 0.87: EL 0.08; WL 1.55; TL 5.26.
In frontal view, sides of head very weakly convex, almost straight, evenly rounded into moderately convex vertex; CI 92. Eye placed slightly below midlength of head, consisting of one clear, convex facet. Genal carina (="occipital carina" of Kempf and Brown, 1968) short but strong, ending at about level of eye and bounding an impressed, shiny gular area. Frontal line not evident above level of upper end of frontal lobes; frontal area deeply impressed; frontal carinae only slightly elevated, nearly flat. Api- cal margin of clypeal lobe narrowly transverse; disc without longi- tudinal costulae. Antenna1 scape thick, basal portion weakly curved, apex incrassate; when laid back along front of head, apex well below vertex margin; SI 68. Mandible with 4-toothed, oblique margin; outer face coarsely costulate.
Mesosoma compact, convex above, sutures obsolete. Propodeal teeth short and blunt; declivity concave in both directions, dis- tinctly carinate on each side, disc transversely rugulose above; inferior propodeal lamellae low and rounded. Propodeal spiracle small, nearly round.
Petiole low, loaf-shaped, sessile, about 0.8 times as high as long and about 0.9 times as broad as long, broadest at about posterior third. Subpetiolar process conspicuous, spiniform, at about midlength of segment.
Gaster broad and strongly recurved, IGR 0.13, second tergum strongly rounded, but less strongly extended distad than in P. goliath. In dorsal view postpetiole (first tergum) distinctly broader



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Snelling & Cover




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52 Psyche [vo~. 99
than long; second tergum slightly shorter and slightly wider than first.
Legs long (metafemur 1.14 mm long and metatibia 0.87 mm long) and slender, greatest thickness of metafemur about 0.18 times length. Tibia1 spur pectinate, tarsal claws slender and simple. Head, mesosoma, petiole, and postpetiole densely and coarsely rugosopunctate, punctures piligerous, deep and crowded, their bot- toms weakly to moderately shiny; second and following gastral segments shiny, with numerous, though scattered, minute piliger- ous punctures.
Vestiture brassy to golden in color, consisting of abundant fine prostrate to suberect pubescence and numerous much longer and coarser suberect to erect hairs.
Color generally brownish-red, antennae and legs more yellow- ish.
Type material. - Described from unique holotype worker: MEXICO, Veracruz: 6 mi NE Catemaco, 1500 ft. elev., 7 July 1976 (A. Newton), from rainforest leaf litter berlesate; deposited in Museum of Comparative Zoology.
Etymology. - Respecting "Uncle" Bill Brown's disdain for patronymics, we have, with affectionate perversity, chosen to dedi- cate this species to him by choosing the Spanish word for "uncle." Discussion. - In the most recent key to New World Proceratium species, that of Ward (1988), P. tio will fail at couplet 4: although a pectinate mesotibial spur is present, the median lobe of the clypeus is truncate at the apex, rather than emarginate. The clypeal character aside, this ant will key to P. goliath, from which it dif- fers as noted in the diagnosis above.
We should note that we disagree with the original characteriza- tion of scape length provided by Kempf and Brown (1968). In their description of P. goliath the apex of the scape is said to just sur- pass the posterior margin of the head (i.e., the vertex) when "held as nearly straight back" as possible. Our study of the holotype and one paratype found that the apex of the scape falls well short of the margin of the vertex; the SI of the type is 72, that of the paratype is 73. Figures 1 and 2 by Kempf and Brown show the correct scape length and the SI in the figure is also 73.



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Snelling & Cover
To Kathy Brown-Wing we are very deeply indebted for the very fine habitus figure of P. tio.
KEMPF, W. W., AND W. L. BROWN, JR.
1968. Report on some neotropical ant studies. Papeis Avuls. Zool. 22: 89-102.
WARD, P. S.
1988. Mesic elements in the western nearctic ant fauna: taxonomic and bio- logical notes on Amblyopone, Proceratium, and Smithistruma (Hymenoptera: Formicidae). Pan-Pacif. Ent. 61 : 102-1 24.



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