Pheidole parva Mayr, 1865
publication ID |
https://doi.org/10.20362/am.015006 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B68783-310E-FFF9-FD73-783CFEC7FD97 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Pheidole parva Mayr, 1865 |
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Pheidole parva Mayr, 1865 View in CoL
Material examined. Bukit Timah Nature Reserve , along path, 22 Sep 2016, W. Wang leg., ZRC _ ENT00000894 View Materials ; Kranji Road , 1.42638, 103.75413, 8-10 Nov 2016, G.W. Yong leg., KR9GPa1492, ZRC GoogleMaps _ HYM_0001774; males and workers, Prince George’s Park Residences ( NUS), 1.292389, 103.774583, Apr-Aug 2015, M.S. Foo & W. Wang leg., malaise trap, ZRC GoogleMaps _ BDP (multiple); males and workers, University Town ( NUS), 1.30622, 103.77458, Apr-Sep 2015, M.S. Foo & W. Wang leg., malaise trap, ZRC GoogleMaps _ BDP (multiple); male, Pulau Semakau New Fragment , SMN1, 1°12’03.1”N, 103°45’45.4”E, 25 Oct- 1 Nov 2012, J. Puniamoorthy et al. leg., malaise trap, Reg. 29547, ZRC _ BDP0016131 View Materials GoogleMaps ; alate queen, Pulau Semakau Old Fragment , SMO3, 1°12’23.9”N, 103°45’37.6”E, 13-20 Aug 2012, J. Puniamoorthy et al. leg., malaise trap, Reg. 29435 ZRC _ BDP0016540 View Materials GoogleMaps .
Material not physically examined. Unknown.
Literature. Man & Lee (2012); Tan & Corlett (2012); Wang et al. (2018a).
Localities. Bukit Timah Nature Reserve; Kranji Road; National University of Singapore campus (Clementi/Kent Ridge, multiple sites); Pulau Semakau.
Habitat/Ecology. This tiny and inconspicuous species was found in a wide variety of habitats, mostly highly disturbed areas including young waste woodland secondary forest fragments and cultivated parks/gardens in urban or semi-urban settings. These ants have also been reported in mangroves, open grasslands, trailside along forest edges, and even on impervious surfaces in residential areas and other man-made infrastructure (see Tan & Corlett 2012). Individuals were often found in soil and leaf litter, in rotting wood, under stones or root mats.
Remarks. Pheidole parva is a relatively widespread species presumed native to the Indomalayan bioregion and introduced outside thereof ( Sarnat et al. 2015). It appears welladapted to human-dominated environments, and is considered invasive in parts of the Old World ( Fischer & Fisher 2013). The species has been suggested to have potential to becoming indoor nuisance pests where they occur in large numbers (Man & Lee 2012; Sarnat et al. 2015)
ZRC |
Zoological Reference Collection, National University of Singapore |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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