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Name changes


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#1 Offline gcsnelling - Posted December 12 2015 - 4:39 AM

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As I hinted a short time ago there were a couple of upcoming name changes in the works. Now that Eli Sarnat and the gang have published their sure to be excellent paper I can elaborate some.
 
What we have been calling Pheidole moerens Forel in southern California and other places is being considered to actually be Pheidole navigans Forel. In addition Pheidole teneriffana became a junior synonym of P. indica !!! Interesting stuff.
This and other tidbits can be found in the publication available here http://zookeys.penso...les.php?id=6050
 
I know what I will be doing on the upcoming holiday.

Edited by dspdrew, December 12 2015 - 8:22 AM.
Fixed accidental hard to read formatting


#2 Offline dspdrew - Posted December 12 2015 - 8:24 AM

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I guess I'll have some journal and video title editing to do.



#3 Offline gcsnelling - Posted December 12 2015 - 11:26 AM

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Yup, afraid so.



#4 Offline Gregory2455 - Posted December 12 2015 - 2:28 PM

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Interesting stuff.



#5 Offline James C. Trager - Posted December 15 2015 - 11:15 AM

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There will also soon be quite a few changes in the classification of the Formicinae subfamily, resulting from this study http://www.biomedcen...471-2148/15/271. The taxonomic changes have not been formally published yet, but will be soon. 
Those that will impact ants I've seen discussed in this forum, so far, affect species up till now considered Camponotus:

- Former subgenus (Colobopsis) is now raised to a full, separate genus. Since Colobopsis is grammatically feminine, this will result in new endings for some of the species names. New versions of the names are Colobopsis etiolata, C. impressa, C. obliqua, the second and third relatively common in warmer parts of eastern USA. (Also note C. truncata of the Mediterranean and Baltic countries, and C. nipponica of Japan. Some other species such a C. mississippiensis & C. hunteri will retain the current spellings.) 
- Former Camponotus gigas, the giant tropical forest "carpenter ant" of Asia, will now become known as Dinomyrmex gigas. 


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#6 Offline Barristan - Posted December 15 2015 - 1:22 PM

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Who has the the final say on such changes? I heared that some European myrmecologists are going to publish a paper which will suggest keeping genera like Anergates, Teleutomyrmex, Strongylognathus. Currently these genera belong to Tetramorium according to Ward et al.

 

Does all the name changing help to better understand ants at all? I doubt that...


Edited by Barristan, December 15 2015 - 1:25 PM.


#7 Offline antmaniac - Posted December 15 2015 - 2:56 PM

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If you ask our moon about Pluto, sure. For us, no much.



#8 Offline James C. Trager - Posted December 16 2015 - 7:01 AM

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Barristan - The arguments are complicated, as you'll see. Taxonomy is a human construct, but evolutionary history is not. 

It is new, deeper understandings of the relatedness, evolutionary history, and fine details of genetics and morphology that lead to the name changes. The names themselves are just labels or signposts that reflect or guide us to those understandings. In this case I presented, Colobopsis & Dinomyrmex turn out to be less closely related to other "Camponotus" in the old sense than are some ants always thought to be in other genera, e.g., Echinopla. The taxonomic choice thus becomes to include Echinopla, etc. in an expanded Camponotus, or break the latter up into smaller groups that are each distinct branches on the camponotine evolutionary tree. 

As for the Tetramorium situation, there is a philosophical difference about naming involved. The lumpers, Ward et al., believe all descendents of a recent common ancestor belong in the same taxon (like putting Echinopla and all the others in a single large Camponotus, which they chose not to do), while the splitters, the European group of ant taxonomists, believe that names should reflect the degree of morphological and behavioral divergence of species among these descendents, even if the divergent ones are evolutionarily right within the larger group. To their thinking, Anergates, etc. are so divergent from other modern descendents of the original Tetramorium that they deserve a unique label to indicate this level of change from the ancestral "plan".

Me, I happen to like good signposts, so I lean a bit toward the European's view. Indeed, have little doubt that most of them would support the changes in the camponotine taxonomy, even though its basis is phylogenetic monophylesis rather than anagenesis. (There's some terminiology many readers never imagined they'd need to look up.) Full disclosure, I am a way-down-the-list co-author on the Europeans' paper, though I only did English editing, not any of the the original writing. 


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