Camponotus cinereus notterae

Distribution
This taxon was described from Australia.

Nomenclature

 *  notterae. Camponotus cinereus subsp. notterae Forel, 1907h: 303 (w.) AUSTRALIA. Combination in C. (Myrmophyma): Emery, 1925b: 110.

Description
Worker minor-media. Mandibles much less curved with a straiter outer edge and much more strongly and thickly punctated than the type 7-8 teeth. Clypeus with a very pronounced frontal lobe, weakly carined. Head as with the type; but the eyes are round as circles, somewhat smaller. Scapes rather longer the shaft protrudes past the back of the head by half its length. Metanotum (= propodeum) as with ephippium, at least as so strongly concave saddle shaped (straight in the the type). The mesometanotal (= mesopropodeal) suture only weakly marked. Pronotum and node like the type; the last somewhat less thick. Limbs somewhat longer than the type; tibias cylindrical, with one row of 7-10 very distinct small spikes on the inner side. Glossy, sharper and less smoothly wrinkled than the type. Overall a rather dense grayish yellow pubescence, stronger than with the type, yet the sculpture is still visible underneath. The tibias have rather short rather rich diagonal upstanding hair, the scape has only a little upstanding hair. Black;mandibles and tibia reddish; scape and remainder of the limbs brownish; The membranes of the gaster are narrow brown yellow lines. Station 152 Goosberry Hill The subspecies notterae has the same form for the head and pronotum as with cinereus, whereas the metanotum (= propodeum) is like ephippium and tasmani. The main differences are strong enough to justify a subspecies. Compared with innexus Forel the clypeus, the form of the pronotum and the pilosity are quite different; even so as with hartogi Forel and oxleyi Forel.