Vombisidris

These rare ants nest and forage arboreally and little is known about their biology. The few nests which have been found were in twigs.

Identification
Mandible short-triangular, the masticatory margin with 5 teeth, uniquely arranged. The large apical tooth is followed by two smaller teeth (third smaller than second), then a long diastema and two small basal teeth. Length of diastema is at least equal to length of margin occupied by the apical group of three teeth. This dentition is autapomorphic and unique in the Myrmicinae. This character alone will instantly diagnose Vombisidris and separate it from all other genera in the subfamily.

The sides of the head behind the eyes have an elongate ridge or groove on each side which starts at the mandibles, runs the length of the head and ends near the upper corners, and touches the lower surface of the eye. In side view, the petiole has a distinct, arched node on its upper surface. This distinctive ridge/groove on the sides of the head behind the eyes combined with the high, arching petiolar node is also diagnostic and will separate these ants from all other ant genera.

Distribution
Eastern India to Queensland, Australia.

Species richness
Species richness by country based on regional taxon lists (countries with darker colours are more species-rich). View Data



Castes
Males have yet to be collected.



Worker of V. renateae from Queensland.

Nomenclature

 *  VOMBISIDRIS [Myrmicinae: Formicoxenini]
 * Vombisidris Bolton, 1991: 1. Type-species: Vombisidris philax, by original designation.

Diagnosis of worker. Monomorphic terrestrial to arboreal myrmicine ants with the following combination of characters.

1. Palp formula 5, 3.

2. Mandible short-triangular, the masticatory margin with 5 teeth, uniquely arranged. The large apical tooth is followed by two smaller teeth (third smaller than second), then a long diastema and two small basal teeth. Length of diastema is at least equal to length of margin occupied by the apical group of three teeth.

3. Anterior clypeal margin lacking an isolated median seta; instead with a pair of setae that straddle the midpoint.

4. Median portion of clypeus broad posteriorly, broadly inserted between the frontal lobes.

5. Frontal lobes narrow, each lobe distinctly narrower than the portion of the clypeus which is inserted between them.

6. Torulus concealed by frontal lobes in full-face view, not freely projecting.

7. Frontal carinae and antennal scrobes absent.

8. Eyes of moderate size, at or slightly in front of the midlength of the sides of the head.

9. Antennae 12-segmented, with a strongly defined 3-segmented apical club.

10. Sides of head usually with a strong sinuate subocular groove; groove incomplete in two species (see second lug of key couplet 1).

11. Alitrunk elongate and low in profile; promesonotum not domed-convex; propodeum bispinose.

12. Propodeal spiracle high on side, at about midlength of sclerite. distinctly separated from the small metapleural gland bulla.

13. Metapleural lobes present, small and rounded.

14. Metasternal process absent.

15. Tibial spurs absent from middle and hind legs.

16. Petiole pedunculate. the spiracle located from very close to the ali trunk articulation to just behind the midlength of the peduncle.

17. Postpetiolar sternite reduced, small in profile.

18. First gastral tergite strongly overlapping the sternite; sternite with a laterobasal angular junction with the tergite or strongly overlapped throughout.

19. Sting functional, strong and simple.

20. Cuticle thick and armoured, sculpture variable. Pilosity present, moderately dense, the individual hairs usually short and often blunted. Scapes with long outstanding (erect to suberect) hairs at least on the leading edge.

Female - As worker but with ocelli and full complement of flight sclerites; winged when virgin. Females known only in Vombisidris bilongrudi, Vombisidris renateae, and Vombisidris australis, see Taylor (1989).