Technomyrmex moerens

Foraging is carried out both on the ground and arboreally but nests are usually constructed in wood, either in fallen timber or in twigs and branches of standing trees. This species is common in cocoa plantations in Ghana and is the species referred to as T sp. by Room (1971). It may also be the species referred to by Terron (1972) in his notes on alate and ergatoid males of a species close to Technomyrmex albipes in Cameroun. (Bolton 2007)

Identification
Bolton (2007) - A member of the T. albipes complex in the Technomyrmex albipes group. It is very similar to vitiensis  but always lacks setae on the propodeal declivity and has the setae on the first gastral tergite sparser but longer, usually longer than the maximum diameter of the eye. In moerens  EPI is 54 - 65, the eye usually somewhat more anteriorly placed than in vitiensis, where EPI is 64 - 84.

Colour of the middle and hind coxae and relative lengths of the longest hairs on the first gastral tergite vary in workers of this species as it is currently conceived. In some populations the middle and hind coxae are yellow and contrast strongly with the darker mesosoma, but in others these coxae are as darkly coloured as the mesosoma. There are, however, many samples intermediate in shade. All queens examined had light coxae, regardless of their colour in the workers. The longest setae on the first gastral tergite are usually distinctly longer than the maximum diameter of the eye, but there are populations in which the setae are noticably shorter, about equal to the maximum diameter of the eye. No taxonomic significance is currently attached to these variants; all are retained as a single species within the diagnosis outlined above.

Worker-queen intercastes are common in moerens , see notes under Technomyrmex vitiensis, Technomyrmex difficilis and Technomyrmex brunneus. The description above relates to forms with basic worker morphology: without ocelli, without differentiation of mesonotum into mesoscutum and mesoscutellum, without development of a prominent metanotum and without a spermatheca. In the most worker-like intercastes an extra short pair of setae may occur on the slightly developed mesoscutellum.

Distribution based on Regional Taxon Lists
Afrotropical Region: Cameroun, Central African Republic, Congo, Democratic Republic of Congo, Gabon, Ghana, Guinea, Ivory Coast, Kenya, Nigeria, Sudan, Uganda, United Republic of Tanzania.

Habitat
T. moerens  is widely distributed and fairly common in forest and woodland zones of sub-Saharan Africa but has not been recorded outside the Afrotropical region.

Nomenclature

 *  moerens. Technomyrmex moerens Santschi, 1913c: 312, fig. 4 (w.) CONGO. Senior synonym of congolensis: Santschi, 1930a: 69; of incisus, longiscapus, nequitus, nigricans: Bolton, 2007a: 28.
 * congolensis. Technomyrmex albipes subsp. congolensis Karavaiev, 1926d: 443 (w.) DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF CONGO. [Unresolved junior secondary homonym of congolensis Forel, above.] Junior synonym of moerens: Santschi, 1930a: 69; Bolton, 2007a: 28.
 * nigricans. Technomyrmex moerens var. nigricans Santschi, 1930a: 69 (w.) DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF CONGO. Junior synonym of moerens: Bolton, 2007a: 28.
 * incisus. Technomyrmex incisus Weber, 1943c: 380, pl. 16, fig. 37 (w-q intercaste, not w.) SUDAN. [Junior secondary homonym of incisum Mukerjee, above.] Replacement name: nequitus Bolton, 1995b: 402. Junior synonym of moerens: Bolton, 2007a: 28.
 * longiscapus. Technomyrmex longiscapus Weber, 1943c: 381, pl. 16, fig. 41 (w.) SUDAN. Junior synonym of moerens: Bolton, 2007a: 28.
 * nequitus. Technomyrmex nequitus Bolton, 1995b: 402. Replacement name for Technomyrmex incisus Weber, 1943c: 380. [Junior secondary homonym of Engramma incisum Mukerjee, 1930: 155.] Junior synonym of moerens: Bolton, 2007a: 28.

Worker
Bolton (2007) - TL 2.4 - 3.1, HL 0.57 - 0.65, HW 0.50 - 0.58, SL 0.54 - 0.66, PW 0.29 - 0.40, WL 0.70 - 0.88 (25 measured). Indices: CI 87 - 92, S1 104 - 120, OI 27 - 33, EP1 54 - 65, DTI 125 - 136.

Frontal carina with 2 (very rarely 3) setae: in profile the posteriormost seta close to the level of the anterior margin of the eye. Dorsum of head posterior to this entirely lacks setae. With head in full-face view the anterior clypeal margin with a very weak, shallow median indentation; sides of head shallowly convex and the posterior margin of the head with a small shallow indentation medially. Eyes located well in front of mid length, EPI above. With mesosoma in profile the mesonotal outline is usually distinctly angled, with a step in the outline that separates dorsal and declivitous faces. Number of seta pairs on mesosoma: pronotum usually 1 long pair (longer than maximum diameter of eye), uncommonly a second shorter pair also present; mesonotum 0; propodeal dorsum 0; lateral margin of propodeal declivity 0. Gastral tergites 1 - 4 with numerous setae, distributed everywhere on the sclerites; maximum length of setae on first gastral tergite usually greater than the maximum diameter of the eye. Head, mesosoma, petiole and gaster uniformly brown to black; in some the gaster may be slightly darker than the mesosoma. Middle and hind coxae varying from yellow, much lighter than the mesosoma, to the same colour as the mesosoma. Femora and tibiae of middle and hind legs about the same colour as the mesosoma or gaster. Tarsi of middle and hind legs dull yellow, paler than the femora and tibiae.

Type Material
Bolton (2007) - Syntype workers, Congo: Mt Boma (thus on data labels, not M'Boumou as in description), 1907 (A. Weiss) [examined]. Both syntypes of this taxon are extremely badly damaged. Only the very abraded gaster of one specimen and the glue-obscured mesosoma of the other remain.

References based on Global Ant Biodiversity Informatics

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 * Bolton B. 2007. Taxonomy of the dolichoderine ant genus Technomyrmex Mayr (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) based on the worker caste. Contributions of the American Entomological Institute 35(1): 1-150.
 * Bolton, B. "Taxonomy of the dolichoderine ant genus Technomyrmex Mayr (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) based on the worker caste." Contributions of the American Entomological Institute 35, no. 1 (2007): 1-149.
 * Eidmann H. 1944. Die Ameisenfauna von Fernando Poo. 27. Beitrag zu den Ergebnissen der Westafrika-Expedition. Zool. Jahrb. Abt. Syst. Ökol. Geogr. Tiere 76: 413-490.
 * Menozzi C. 1930. Formiche della Somalia italiana meridionale. Memorie della Società Entomologica Italiana. 9: 76-130.
 * Menozzi C. 1942. Formiche dell'isola Fernando Poo e del territorio del Rio Muni (Guinea Spagnola). 24. Beitrag zu den wissenschaftlichen Ergebnissen der Forschungsreise H. Eidmann nach Spanisch-Guinea 1939 bis 1940. Zoologischer Anzeiger 140: 164-182.
 * Ross S. R. P. J., F. Hita Garcia, G. Fischer, and M. K. Peters. 2018. Selective logging intensity in an East African rain forest predicts reductions in ant diversity. Biotropica 1-11.
 * Santschi F. 1913. Glanures de fourmis africaines. Annales de la Société Entomologique de Belgique 57: 302-314.
 * Shattuck S. O. 1994. Taxonomic catalog of the ant subfamilies Aneuretinae and Dolichoderinae (Hymenoptera: Formicidae). University of California Publications in Entomology 112: i-xix, 1-241.
 * Weber N. A. 1943. The ants of the Imatong Mountains, Anglo-Egyptian Sudan. Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology 93: 263-389.
 * Wheeler W. M. 1922. Ants of the American Museum Congo expedition. A contribution to the myrmecology of Africa. VIII. A synonymic list of the ants of the Ethiopian region. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 45: 711-1004