Polyrhachis queenslandica

This species is an arboreal nester, using silk to join the leaves of various lowland rainforest trees and shrubs (Kohout 1999, 2000; Robson & Kohout 2005, 2007; Kohout, 2012).

Identification
As indicated by Kohout (1994), the most obvious differences between Polyrhachis delicata and P. queenslandica are their colour and the orientation of their propodeal spines. However, due to a high degree of variability, notably within Queensland populations of both species, these characters can be unreliable and, while both species are usually separable, no single character is universally diagnostic. The propodeal spines in P. delicata are generally more strongly upturned, but the actual angle of elevation varies between specimens, even those of the same nest series. The propodeal spines in P. queenslandica are distinctly less elevated with only a small amount of variation between the specimens examined. The colour of the body appears to be a more reliable character to separate the species but only in fully pigmented specimens. A mostly red or reddish-brown mesosoma, gaster and appendages, contrasting with a darker head (almost black in some specimens) characterises P. delicata, while the body in P. queenslandica is mostly uniformly black or very dark reddish-brown. The sculpturation of the head and mesosoma in P. delicata is rather distinctly reticulate-punctate and opaque, while it is markedly more finely and closely punctate in P. queenslandica. The petiolar node in P. delicata is relatively slim and distinctly narrows dorsally in lateral view, with the anterior face smoothly curving onto the petiolar dorsum in an uninterrupted line that incorporates the anterior edge of the dorsoposteriorly elevated median spine. In contrast, the petiolar node in P. queenslandica is distinctly thicker in lateral view, with the anterior face curving onto a virtually flat dorsum and the median petiolar spine dorsoposteriorly elevated at a distinctly steeper angle. The latter character does not serve to separate the queens of the two species, however, the median petiolar spine in the queen of P. queenslandica is simply pointed, while its apex is clearly emarginated in P. delicata.

Distribution
This taxon was described from Australia.

The distribution of P. queenslandica is divided between New Guinea and northern Queensland, where it overlaps with Polyrhachis delicata. The syntypes of the synonym P. dahli unisculpta, collected at Wareo on Huon Peninsula, and a single worker from Kokoda, are the only known records of the species from New Guinea. In Australia it is relatively common, though somewhat less abundant than P. delicata, particularly towards the southern limit of its distribution. The known Australian range extends from the tip of Cape York Peninsula south to about the Paluma Range.

Nomenclature

 *  queenslandica. Polyrhachis queenslandica Emery, 1895g: 356 (w.) AUSTRALIA. Crawley, 1921: 96 (q.m.). Combination in P. (Myrmothrinax): Emery, 1925b: 183. Senior synonym of unisculpta: Kohout, 1998: 510. See also: Kohout, 2012: 53.
 * unisculpta. Polyrhachis dahli var. unisculpta Viehmeyer, 1914b: 48 (w.q.) NEW GUINEA. Combination in P. (Myrmothrinax): Emery, 1925b: 183. Junior synonym of queenslandica: Kohout, 1998: 510.

Polyrhachis queenslandica type material.

Syntype workers. Type locality: AUSTRALIA, QUEENSLAND, Kamerunga (M. Podenzana),, (examined by Kohout, 2012).

Polyrhachis dahli unisculpta type material.

Syntype workers. Type locality: NEW GUINEA, Huon Pen., Wareo, (examined by Kohout, 2012).

Additional References

 * Kohout, R.J. 2012. A review of the Australian Polyrhachis ants of the subgenera Myrma Billberg, Myrmatopa Forel, Myrmothrinax Forel and Polyrhachis Fr. Smith (Hymenoptera: Formicidae: Formicinae). Memoirs of the Queensland Museum – Nature 56(1): 25-59.