Stenamma huachucanum

Rarely collected. A few collections have come from under stones. One of these was from an area at the edge of a pine-fir woodland and the other from on an open slope. A worker was also found in a leaf litter sample taken from an oak-pine-juniper woodland.

Identification
The species is distinguished by the following characters: Small eye for a Stenamma, the greatest diameter of which is approximately 0.10 mm and has 5-7 ommatidia; very weakly developed dypeal carinae and mesoepinotal impression; pair of extremely smaIl (almost vestigial) tuberculate epinotal spines; the unusually high petiolar node which is much compressed anteroposteriorly; base of gaster almost destitute of longitudinal rugulae, these when present or well developed apparently never exceeding 0.05 mm in length; bicolored appearance, and the delicate sculpturing of the body.

Smith 1957.

Distribution
This taxon was described from the United States.

Range
USA. Arizona. This species is known from the Catalina, Huachuca and Chiricahua Mountains. There is also a record of this species from Colorado (Gregg 1963) and Texas (Van Pelt 1983).

Nomenclature

 *  huachucanum. Stenamma huachucanum Smith, M.R. 1957b: 153, pl. 2, fig. 8 (w.) U.S.A.

Type Material
The holotype and eight paratype workers are in the collection of the U. S. National Museum under No. 62393. The remaining paratypes are in the collection of W. S. Creighton.

Type Locality Information
Head of Carr Canyon, Huachuca Mountains, Arizona

Etymology
Toponym. Named for the Huachuca Mountains.

Additional References

 * Gregg, R. E. 1963. The ants of Colorado, with reference to their ecology, taxonomy, and geographic distribution. University of Colorado Press, Boulder.
 * Smith, M. R. 1957. Revision of the genus Stenamma Westwood in America north of Mexico (Hymenoptera, Formicidae). American Midland Naturalist. 57:133-174.
 * Van Pelt, A. F. 1983. Ants of the Chisos Mountains, Texas (Hymenoptera: Formicidae). Southwestern Naturalist. 28:137-142.