Nylanderia bourbonica (Forel, 1886)

Hamer, Matthew T., Lee, Jonathan Hon Chung, Tse, Cheung Yau Leo, Silva, Thiago S. R. & Guénard, Benoit, 2022, Remarkable diversity in a little red dot: a comprehensive checklist of known ant species in Singapore (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) with notes on ecology and taxonomy, Asian Myrmecology (e 015006) 15, pp. 1-152 : 49

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.20362/am.015006

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15474052

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B68783-3165-FF94-FD4B-78BCFE7FFDF7

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Nylanderia bourbonica (Forel, 1886)
status

 

Nylanderia bourbonica (Forel, 1886) View in CoL

Material examined. Alate queens, Changi, 1.36206, 104.02525, 7 May 2020, mercury vapour lamp, ZRC GoogleMaps ; alate queen, Pulau Semakau New Fragment , SMN2, 1°12’04.5’’N, 103°45’46.1’’E, 21-28 Nov 2013, J. Puniamoorthy et al. leg., replanted mangroves, malaise trap, Reg. 30285, ZRC _ BDP0015368 View Materials GoogleMaps ; alate queen, same locality and collector as previous, 13-20 Aug 2012, replanted mangroves, malaise trap, Reg. 29431, ZRC _ BDP0015362 View Materials GoogleMaps ; male, Pulau Ubin, PU 2, 1°24’39.1”N, 103°59’23.2”E, 22-29 Sep 2012, J. Puniamoorthy et al. leg., mangroves, malaise trap, Reg. 29489, ZRC _ BDP00008654 View Materials GoogleMaps .

Material not physically examined. Unknown.

Literature. None. New record.

Localities. Changi; Pulau Semakau; Pulau Ubin.

Habitat/Ecology. A recognized tramp species that has spread nearly worldwide to tropical or subtropical areas mainly via human commerce ( Wetterer 1998), N. bourbonica identified from Singapore appears to occur in a fairly broad range of habitats at varied levels of human disturbance. These habitats include disturbed secondary forest fragments in semi-urban settings, also replanted mangroves and old growth mangrove forests.

Remarks. At the time of writing, the examined material (comprising only winged alates) could not be confidently established as N. bourbonica with absolute certainty. The species appears to be morphologically variable across populations, and therein lies the possibility that some of these populations may actually be different, albeit closely-related, species. In view of this taxonomic conundrum, though there are slight differences between the morphology of the Singapore specimens and that of the type images, we tentatively consider the Singapore specimens to be conspecific. Species validity should be reassessed in future when more empirical evidence such as DNA is made available for global populations of N. bourbonica .

ZRC

Zoological Reference Collection, National University of Singapore

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Formicidae

Genus

Nylanderia

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