Leptomyrmex, or spider ants, is a genus of ants and a distinctive member of the ant subfamily Dolichoderinae.[2] Commonly known as "spider ants" for their long legs and spider-like movements, these orange and black ants are prominent residents of intact wet forest and sclerophyll habitats throughout their range. One extant species, Leptomyrmex relictus, is known from central Brazil;[3] otherwise, the global distribution of this genus is restricted to eastern Australia, New Caledonia and New Guinea, as well as the nearby Indonesian islands of Aru and Seram.[4]
Leptomyrmex | |
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L. darlingtoni worker from Australia | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Class: | Insecta |
Order: | Hymenoptera |
Family: | Formicidae |
Subfamily: | Dolichoderinae |
Tribe: | Leptomyrmecini |
Genus: | Leptomyrmex Mayr, 1862 |
Type species | |
Formica erythrocephala | |
Diversity[1] | |
28 species |
Newly hatched Extatosoma tiaratum stick insects mimic these ants to avoid predation.[5]
Workers of Leptomyrmex can be easily recognized by elongate antennal scapes which surpass the posterior margin of the head by more than one half their length, a medially notched hypostoma, mandibles with 7–15 teeth and 5–12 denticles, and a laterally located anterior tentorial pit.[4]
Queens are known from only seven species. All known macro-Leptomyrmex queens are wingless (ergatoid). They can be differentiated from workers by the presence of ocelli and their larger size, including enlarged mesosoma and gaster. Whereas the workers possess a mesosoma that is smooth in profile, the profile of queens is distinctly impressed at the promesonotal suture and the metanotal groove. Appendages are noticeably stouter. Queens of at least one micro-Leptomyrmex species possess wings.[6]
Species groups
editThe species are informally split into two groups: the macro-Leptomyrmex (21 species), and its sister group, the micro-Leptomyrmex (six species).[4] Macro-Leptomyrmex are large, diurnal and many are conspicuously colored in black, orange or bicolorous black and orange. Micro-Leptomyrmex species have been recently described from Australia,[7] and were placed in Leptomyrmex based on mandibular dentition, anterior clypeal margin configuration, elongate scapes and head, cleft medial hypostomal margin, anterior tentorial pit location, keeled fourth gastral sternite and reduced hind tibial spurs. In some cases, scapes are shorter than in the macro species, and in one species (L. ramorniensis) the hypostoma is only weakly notched. All six species are readily distinguished from their larger congeners by their small size (head width < 0.80mm), brown coloration, relatively short dorsal face of the propodeum, angular (not rounded) petiole and gaster lacking lateral compression.[4][8] All micro species occur in eastern Australian rainforests.[9]
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Evolution
editWith exception of the South American species Leptomyrmex relictus, the Leptomyrmex species are currently confined to eastern Australia and several nearby Pacific islands. However, the discovery of fossil specimens from the Dominican Republic (20 my) and a supposedly related genus, Leptomyrmula, from Sicily (30 my) led Wilson to describe the evolutionary history of this genus as a "considerable biogeographic anomaly".[12] The assertion that extant species of Leptomyrmex are relicts of a lineage once widespread across the globe that have survived in the tropical refuges of Australasia, is compelling, and similar biogeographic patterns are seen in other so-called "relictual" lineages in Australia, New Guinea and New Caledonia (among them the ant subfamily Myrmeciinae).[13]
The sister group relationship of the winged micro-Leptomyrmex to the wingless macro- clade suggests that the loss of wings may have occurred relatively recently in this lineage, and that stem lineages may not necessarily have been wingless. These observations, in addition to the fact that the sister group of Leptomyrmex (i.e., (Forelius + Dorymyrmex)) also has winged queens, may help explain the proposed widespread former distribution. On the other hand, a recent molecular phylogenetic analysis of the Dolichoderinae places Leptomyrmex firmly within a clade of species (tribe Leptomyrmecini) whose origins appears to be in the Neotropics, with two main dispersal events to Australia.[14] This suggests that the Sicilian fossil Leptomyrmula is not part of this group.[13]
References
edit- ^ Bolton, B. (2014). "Leptomyrmex". AntCat. Retrieved 4 July 2014.
- ^ "Genus: Leptomyrmex". AntWeb. Retrieved 11 October 2013.
- ^ Boudinot et al. 2016.
- ^ a b c d Lucky & Ward 2010, p. 4
- ^ Williams & Evans 1993, p. 175
- ^ Lucky & Ward 2010, p. 14
- ^ Smith & Shattuck 2009, p. 57
- ^ Smith & Shattuck 2009, p. 58
- ^ a b Lucky & Ward 2010, p. 62
- ^ Lucky & Ward 2010, pp. 8–9
- ^ Lucky & Ward 2010, p. 25
- ^ Wilson 1985, p. 35
- ^ a b Lucky & Ward 2010, p. 63
- ^ Ward et al. 2010, pp. 356–357
- Boudinot, Brendon E.; Probst, Rodolfo S.; Brandão, Carlos Roberto F.; Feitosa, Rodrigo M.; Ward, Philip S. (2016). "Out of the Neotropics: newly discovered relictual species sheds light on the biogeographical history of spider ants (Leptomyrmex, Dolichoderinae, Formicidae)". Systematic Entomology. 41 (3): 658–671. Bibcode:2016SysEn..41..658B. doi:10.1111/syen.12181. S2CID 89294356.
- This article incorporates text from a scholarly publication published under a copyright license that allows anyone to reuse, revise, remix and redistribute the materials in any form for any purpose: Lucky, Andrea; Ward, Philip S. (2010), "Taxonomic revision of the ant genus Leptomyrmex Mayr (Hymenoptera: Formicidae)" (PDF), Zootaxa, 2688: 1–67, doi:10.11646/zootaxa.2688.1.1 Please check the source for the exact licensing terms.
- Smith, D.J.; Shattuck, S. (2009), "Six new, unusually small ants of the genus Leptomyrmex (Hymenoptera: Formicidae).", Zootaxa, 2142: 57–68, doi:10.11646/zootaxa.2142.1.5
- Ward, P.S.; Brady, S.G.; Fisher, B.L.; Schultz, T.R. (2010), "Phylogeny and biogeography of dolichoderine ants: Effects of data partitioning and relict taxa on historical inference", Systematic Biology, 59 (3): 342–362, doi:10.1093/sysbio/syq012, PMID 20525640
- Wilson, E. O. (1985), "Ants of the Dominican Amber (Hymenoptera: Formicidae). 3. The Subfamily Dolichoderinae", Psyche: A Journal of Entomology, 92: 17–37, doi:10.1155/1985/20969
- Williams, Geoff; Evans, Terry; Australian Museum (1993), Hidden rainforests: subtropical rainforests and their invertebrate biodiversity, NSWU Press, ISBN 978-0-86840-054-9
External links
edit- "A video on how Spider Ant colonies function". Youtube.
- Media related to Leptomyrmex at Wikimedia Commons
- Data related to Leptomyrmex at Wikispecies