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Revised Phylogenetic Classification of Formicinae (Colobopsis and Dinomyrmex)


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#1 Offline Miles - Posted February 2 2016 - 5:22 PM

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Some myrmecological giants (Philip S. Ward, Bonnie B. Blaimer, and Brian L. Fisher) have published a significant revision of certain Formicinae genera. Below is the open access article.

 

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Provided abstract:

 

The classification of the ant subfamily Formicinae is revised to reflect findings from a recent molecular phylogenetic study and complementary morphological investigations. The existing classification is maintained as far as possible, but some tribes and genera are redefined to ensure monophyly. Eleven tribes are recognized, all of which are strongly supported as monophyletic groups: Camponotini, Formicini, Gesomyrmecini, Gigantiopini, Lasiini (= Prenolepidii syn. n.), Melophorini (= Myrmecorhynchini syn. n.; = Notostigmatini syn. n.), Myrmelachistini stat. rev. (= Brachymyrmicini syn. n.), Myrmoteratini, Oecophyllini, Plagiolepidini, and Santschiellini stat. rev. Most of the tribes remain similar in content, but the generic composition of Lasiini, Melophorini, and Plagiolepidini is changed substantially. Species that have been placed in the genus Camponotus belong to three separate lineages. To ensure monophyly of this large, cosmopolitan genus we institute the following changes: Colobopsisand Dinomyrmex, both former subgenera of Camponotus, are elevated to genus level (stat. rev.), and two former genera, Forelophilus and Phasmomyrmex, are demoted to subgenus status (stat. n. and stat. rev., respectively) under Camponotus; two erstwhile subgenera of PhasmomyrmexMyrmorhachis and Myrmacantha, become junior synonyms (syn. n.) of Camponotus (Phasmomyrmex); and the Camponotus subgenus Myrmogonia becomes a junior synonym (syn. n.) of ColobopsisDinomyrmex, represented by a single species from southeast Asia, D. gigas, is quite distinctive, but Camponotus and Colobopsis exhibit more subtle differences, despite being well separated phylogenetically. We identify morphological features of the worker caste that are broadly useful for distinguishing these two genera. Colobopsis species on the islands of New Caledonia and Fiji—regions with few native Camponotus species—tend to exceed these diagnostic bounds, but in this case regionally applicable character differences can be used to distinguish the two clades. Despite confusing similarities in the worker caste Colobopsis and Camponotus retain diagnostic differences in their larvae and pupae.


Edited by Miles, February 2 2016 - 5:22 PM.

  • James C. Trager, gcsnelling and Jonathan21700 like this

PhD Student & NSF Graduate Research Fellow | University of Florida Dept. of Entomology & Nematology - Lucky Ant Lab 

 

Founder & Director of The Ant Network. Ant keeper since 2009. Insect ecologist and science communicator. He/Him.


#2 Offline James C. Trager - Posted February 3 2016 - 2:02 PM

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Myrmecological giants reclassify giant ants.  

But because they also reclassified some blockheaded ants does not make them blockheads.   :whistle:

 

Good article - I just skimmed it, and will read carefully, later.


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#3 Offline James C. Trager - Posted February 9 2016 - 2:35 PM

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I've read it now, and generally, it is a well-explained, though relatively minor reclassification of Formicinae, but minor only because earlier works had already hinted at much of what was to come. Though Dinomyrmex & Colobopsis have gotten all the press, the biggest changes actually are regarding which genera are included in tribes Lasiini and Plagiolepidini, with Prenolepis-Nylanderia-Paratrechina and relatives moving from the latter to the former, and with Brachymyrmex & Myrmelachista to their own, basal branch of the whole subfamily.
It's a great start on a whole lot of future phylogeny and classification work, including clarifications of the expansive dark recesses of Camponotus itself (and related and also species-rich Polyrhachis) and of the genera that remain in Plagiolepidini.

Meanwhile, some urgent concerns for us here in North America are modern, species level revisions of some of our most common (and some not-so-common) ants: Myrmica, Aphaenogaster, Formica rufa-microgyna & F. neogagates groups, Tapinoma, Dorymyrmex.

(Plus, there are still some conundrums in western Polyergus, which unnamed earlier researchers didn't sort out.  :whistle: )



#4 Offline gcsnelling - Posted February 9 2016 - 5:25 PM

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Gee I wonder who that was?



#5 Offline dspdrew - Posted February 10 2016 - 8:00 AM

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What are those conundrums that the unnamed researchers didn't sort out? :lol:



#6 Offline James C. Trager - Posted February 10 2016 - 1:25 PM

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Well, what the latest reviser called Polyergus mexicanus has been shown genetically to be at least two species, and might actually be 4 or 5. 
(Not my problem ;) )



#7 Offline dspdrew - Posted February 10 2016 - 3:07 PM

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Ohh wow, I see. That guy...

 

:D






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