Camponotus (Myrmosericus) parius Emery, 1889

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 : 39

publication ID

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

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15473946

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B68783-3173-FF82-FF67-7883FDF1FEF7

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Camponotus (Myrmosericus) parius Emery, 1889
status

 

Camponotus (Myrmosericus) parius Emery, 1889 View in CoL

Material examined. Lee Kong Chian Natural History Museum ( NUS), 29 Mar 2018, W.Wang leg., WW-SG18- Campo 1, ZRC _ ENT00000919 View Materials ; MacRitchie Catchment Reservoir , 20 Apr 1994, collector unknown, NS 123B, ZRC _ HYM_0000109; MacRitchie Reservoir , 6 Jan 2014, Sk. Yamane leg., ZRC _ HYM_0000404; Upper Peirce Reservoir , 10 Jan 2014, Sk. Yamane leg. ( SKYC) ; Pulau Ubin , 7 Jan 2014, Sk. Yamane leg., ZRC _ HYM_0000405; Choa Chu Kang Avenue 2, Block 273, 1 Mar 2017, D.J. Court leg., ZRC _ HYM_0001723; University Hall ( NUS), 1.297111, 103.776583, 12-19 Aug 2015, M.S. Foo & W. Wang leg., malaise trap, NUS0084, ZRC _ BDP0047532 View Materials GoogleMaps ; Prince George’s Park Residences ( NUS), 1.292389, 103.778694, 8-15 Jul 2015, M.S. Foo & W. Wang leg., malaise trap, NUS0061, ZRC _ BDP0045928 View Materials GoogleMaps ; same locality as previous, 1-8 Sep 2015, M.S. Foo & W. Wang leg., malaise trap, NUS0093, ZRC _ BDP0047461 View Materials GoogleMaps ; Pulau Tekukor , 9 Dec 2016, G.W. Yong leg., ZRC _ ENT00027978 View Materials ; St. John’s Island , 1.220167, 103.847472, 11 May 2016, J.S. Ascher et al. leg., ZRC _ ENT00047855 View Materials GoogleMaps ; City Hall , 29 Jul 2014, J.K. Wetterer leg., ZRC _ ENT00054652 View Materials ; Outram Park, same collector and date as previous, ZRC _ ENT00054653 View Materials ; Serangoon , 30 Jul 2014, same collector as previous, ZRC _ ENT00054654 View Materials ; Marine Parade , 1 Aug 2014, same collector as previous, ZRC _ ENT00054655 View Materials ; Kranji , 2 Aug 2014, same collector as previous, ZRC _ ENT00054656 View Materials ; Singapore Botanic Gardens , 5 Aug 2014, same collector as previous, ZRC _ ENT00054659 View Materials ; Pasir Panjang, same collector and date as previous, ZRC _ ENT00054660 View Materials .

Material not physically examined. Unknown.

Literature. Wang et al. (2018a) [misidentified as Camponotus rufoglaucus ].

Localities. Choa Chu Kang Avenue 2; City Hall; Kranji; National University of Singapore (Kent Ridge/Clementi campus); MacRitchie Reservoir; Marine Parade; Outram Park; Pasir Panjang; Pulau Tekukor; Pulau Ubin; Serangoon; Singapore Botanic Gardens; St. John’s Island; Upper Peirce Reservoir.

Habitat/Ecology. This species is often associated with young secondary habitat in Singapore, also commonly observed close to human infrastructure in urban or semi-urban settings. Nests were typically seen in soil in cultivated grassland or grass patches near roadside trees. Colony presence is often conspicuous with narrow nest entrance usually surrounded by a relatively (much) wider outer ring of sandy soil.

Remarks. Often mistaken for the other more well-known black Camponotus species — C. auriventris , C. parius can be distinguished from the latter mainly by the absence of a deep metanotal groove (in C. auriventris the metanotal groove is visible as a deep indentation between mesonotum and propodeum in lateral view), also a smoother sculpture with fine whitish pubescence.

Camponotus parius also closely resembles C. rufoglaucus in general habitus. Workers of the two species can be differentiated by colour – C. parius is almost entirely uniformly black, while C. rufoglaucus is typically black with varying amounts of reddish-brown. Body colour, however, might be unreliable because of the broad variation apparent in the latter species. The species may also be distinguished based on condition of standing pilosity. In C. parius workers, standing hairs on entire dorsum are sparse, laterally-projecting hairs almost absent along sides of head in full-face view except in anterior portion closer to mandibular base. In contrast, C. rufoglaucus workers have denser and more numerous standing hairs on entire dorsum, especially the mesosoma; in full-face view, sides of head lined with many laterally-projecting hairs.

ZRC

Zoological Reference Collection, National University of Singapore

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Formicidae

Genus

Camponotus

Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF