Crematogaster pinicola

A pine dwelling specialist that found and maintain their colonies in pine trees in the SW United States.

Identification
Deyrup and Cover (2007) - Workers morphologically indistinguishable from those of Crematogaster ashmeadi, except for a distinctive color difference in freshly collected material. In C. pinicola workers, the head, mesosoma, petiole, postpetiole, and appendages are ferrugineous red, and the gaster is black. In C. ashmeadi, mature specimens are always a uniform dark brown to black. A similar color distinction is seen in alate queens; those of C. pinicola are notably bicolored, those of C. ashmeadi are uniformly brown or black. Males of C. pinicola are generally somewhat lighter in color than those of C. ashmeadi, but are harder to distinguish reliably than the corresponding female castes. Note: detailed morphometric studies might possibly reveal the existence of minute, but consistent morphological differences between the two species, but a detailed examination of all three castes in both species has not provided hints that such differences exist.

Specimens of C. ashmeadi, which appear blackish in the field, often appear brownish in collections, especially if the specimens have been stored for several years in alcohol prior to mounting. The gaster may fade somewhat less than the head and mesosoma, so specimens may appear obscurely bicolored. Specimens of C. pinicola can fade from bright mahogany-red to a dull brown, converging in color with some specimens of C. ashmeadi. The authors cannot at present confidently identify all specimens in collections. Associations with alates are sometimes useful, as queens seem to show less color change than workers as they age. We have not found differences in male genitalic structures, so males are no help in resolving this problem.

In describing a species of ant that can be recognized visually only by its color we are aware that we a treading on the myrmecological equivalent of “thin ice.” Early ant systematists were notorious for naming new taxa (both specific and infraspecific) based on minute (and indeed, sometimes entirely imaginary) differences in color, sculpture, or pilosity. Creighton (1950) was withering in his criticism of these practices, and subsequent generations of ant taxonomists have been strongly conditioned to believe that color alone is unreliable as a separatory character on the species level. Much cumulative experience with the genus Crematogaster is an additional reason for caution. Color variation is not uncommon in Crematogaster species. For example, dark and bicolored variants have been observed in other Crematogaster of the eastern United States, notably Crematogaster laeviuscula (as atkinsoni) and Crematogaster pilosa. In both species, northern specimens tend to be uniformly black or brown in color, while bicolored specimens are sometimes found in Florida and elsewhere along the Gulf Coast. With precisely this in mind, Johnson (1988) treated C. pinicola as a color variant form of C. ashmeadi.

We believe that ecological evidence clearly indicates that C. ashmeadi and C. pinicola are reproductively isolated, and thus C. pinicola is a good species, not merely a color variant. (see the biology section below for more details regarding the ecological distinctiveness of this species).

Distribution
We expect that C. pinicola will be found to occur widely on the southern coastal plain where suitable habitats are found. Material collected throughout Florida shows a remarkable consistency in color, size range, and morphology. Crematogaster pinicola is clearly less variable than its sister species, C. ashmeadi, which shows more obvious variation in size and color over its much wider geographic distribution.

Distribution based on Regional Taxon Lists
Nearctic Region: United States.



Biology
Deyrup and Cover (2007) - Prior to European settlement, much of the southeastern United States was covered with pine forests that were structured and maintained by frequent fires (Frost 1993). These forests might be on wet sites (flatwoods - see here for a study of a FL pine flatwoods ant community) or dry sites (sandhill) but they were similar in general structure, with a dense herbaceous ground layer and large, usually widely scattered pines, such as slash pine, P. elliottii, and longleaf pine, Pinus palustris. Shrubs and woody vines were suppressed by fire, but persisted in patches that were protected by natural fire breaks. The pines survived the fires by a series of adaptations, the most important of which (from an ant’s point of view) were the thick, loose layers of insulating bark at the base of the tree, thick twigs (which are less flammable than fine twigs), and the tendency for the lower branches and twigs to die and drop off, even when they receive plenty of light (thus reducing the chance that fire will be carried into the crown of the tree). Crematogaster pinicola appears to be specialized to endure frequent fires by taking advantage of the fire adaptations of pines. When the lower twigs and branches begin to senesce, they are quickly attacked by scavenging insects. At the Archbold Biological Station in central Florida for example, these are scolytids, such as Pityoborus comatus and Pityophthorus pulicarius and cerambycids, such as Eupogonius pauper. The activities of the beetle larvae provide a succession of thick hollow twigs where C. pinicola can become established, even in young trees. Once established colonies gradually relocate up the trunk as branches die. As a tree matures, there are occasional dead twigs and branches up in the crown, and the buildup of thick layers of bark along the trunk provides another nesting area, especially where the outer bark is riddled with the abandoned galleries of moths. The creation of cavities in the bark by moths has been quantified by Tschinkel (2002). The thickest bark is at the base of the tree, and in large trees larvae and pupae of males and queens may be found near the root crown, sometimes below ground level. This brings part of the colony in contact with the diverse subterranean fauna of southeastern pinelands, including a large number of potential predators, such as army ants. On the other hand, the sequestration of these larvae, especially the large queen larvae, at or below ground level may provide some protection from woodpeckers.

Walter Tschinkel and several associates have published detailed studies of the ecology of a pine-inhabiting Crematogaster (referred to as C. ashmeadi) in the Appalachicola National Forest in northern Florida. (Hahn and Tschinkel, 1997, Hess and James, 1998, Baldacci and Tschinkel, 1999, Tschinkel and Hess, 1999, and Tschinkel (2002). Tschinkel (pers. comm.) says the ants were, “were red and black, and considering their rather particular life cycle and nesting habits, quite distinct from the all-black species on hardwoods.” Based on this comment, and our own collections on pines in the same area, we are confident that the ant studied by Tschinkel is C. pinicola, not C. ashmeadi.

In the Apalachicola National Forest, mating flights of C. pinicola occur in June and July (Tschinkel 2002). Nest-founding queens regularly occur in abandoned beetle galleries in small dead branches on pine saplings (Hahn and Tschinkel 1995, Baldacci and Tschinkel 1999). Small trees, under 7 m tall, are preferred, and trees with more than two dead branches are also preferred (Baldacci and Tschinkel, 1999). Such trees are far too small to support a mature colony of C. pinicola, which contains several tens of thousands of individuals (Tschinkel 2002). Workers from one colony are hostile to workers from other colonies (Tschinkel 2002), and it is possible that it is safest course of action for founding queens is to found a colony in a tree that is yet unsuitable for large colonies. Once established, these small founding colonies could then send scouts to find a large tree that is not already well defended by another colony. It appears that there is never more than one colony in a tree, and few colonies occupy more than one tree (Tschinkel 2002). Surveys, using baits and other methods, of trees in class sizes suitable for mature colonies revealed 55 to almost 90% of the trees were occupied by C. pinicola (Tschinkel and Hess 1999, Tschinkel 2002). The higher percentage was obtained by more diverse and intensive survey techniques, and is probably the more accurate figure (Tschinkel 2002). There are no co-dominant arboreal ants in these pine forests, although several other arboreal ant species may co-occur with C. pinicola (Tschinkel and Hess 1999).

Crematogaster pinicola may be an important part of the diet of southeastern pine woodpeckers, especially the endangered red-cockaded woodpecker, whose diet was studied by Hess and James (1998). In the Appalachicola National Forest they found that C. pinicola comprised about 43% of the woodpecker’s arthropod diet, a degree of specialization on a single prey species that may be unique for insectivorous birds in the United States. Many birds show ephemeral specialization on single species of insects that are at a high point in a population cycle, but the red-cockaded woodpecker can afford persistent specialization because ant colonies themselves are abundant, long-lived, and available at all seasons. This ant revises the moral of Aesop’s fable of the grasshopper and the ant: the improvident grasshopper may vanish in the winter, but the thrifty and industrious ant can be eaten all year long! The original distribution of C. pinicola, like that of the red-cockaded woodpecker, was probably centered in the distribution of the longleaf pine ecosystem. This ecosystem, which once covered approximately 92 million acres, from the southeastern tip of Virginia to eastern Texas, has been almost completely destroyed (97% of the old growth forest is gone), and much of what remains is highly fragmented and difficult to manage with fire (Frost 1993). Crematogaster pinicola may have undergone a major decline with the reduction of its habitat, but it is definitely not an endangered species. The gross inequalities imposed by size scale are all in favor of C. pinicola: while a single family group of the red-cockaded woodpecker requires about 40 hectares of foraging habitat (Hooper 1996), a single hectare of large pines could support many colonies and thousands of individuals of C. pinicola. The red-cockaded woodpecker is not threatened by loss of its food supply, but by the lack of suitable nesting trees, and by its tendency to leave small, remnant patches of pine forest (Wilson 1992).

While broadly sympatric with C. ashmeadi across most of Florida, C. pinicola is distinctively different in its ecology. It nests exclusively in pine trees, particularly slash pine (Pinus elliotii) and longleaf pine (P. palustris), which have relatively robust twigs. Pines occupied by C. pinicola are usually open-grown (i.e., well-separated from other trees) and surrounded by low brush or low perennial herbs and grasses. These pines may be in dry sandhill habitats or in wetter flatwoods habitats. Both habitat types are maintained by frequent fires that retard the invasion of other woody plant species. In sharp contrast, C. ashmeadi shows much wider ecological tolerances in nest site selection, and in habitat preferences. C. ashmeadi nests in pines, in many hardwoods including oaks (Quercus spp.), hickories (Carya spp.), ash (Fraxinus caroliniana), red maple (Acer rubrum), shrubs such as winged sumac (Rhus copallina L.), vines such as greenbriar (Smilax spp.) and grape (Vitis spp.) and in the hollow stems of large herbs such as dog fennel (Eupatorium capillifolium). Trees, shrubs, vines and herbs occupied by C. ashmeadi may be in open sites or under a dense canopy, and may be in dry or wet habitats. Pines growing in mixed hardwood stands, surrounded by high brush, or thickly covered with vines, are much more likely to be occupied by C. ashmeadi than C. pinicola. Our extensive collecting experience has shown that the two species show considerable segregation by habitat across much of Florida, but that zones of overlap, where pines mix with hardwoods, occur as well. Within these zones it is not uncommon to find C. pinicola in a large pine tree only a few meters from an oak inhabited by C. ashmeadi. What is especially noteworthy is that these forms maintain their integrity where they co-occur; we have no found color intergrades in these overlap areas, and we have not found dark queens with bicolored workers or bicolored queens with dark workers. Based on these observations, we conclude that the two forms are reproductively isolated and thus constitute separate, if closely related species.

Nomenclature

 *  pinicola. Crematogaster pinicola Deyrup & Cover, 2007: 101, figs. 1-3 (w.q.m.) U.S.A.

This new species of Crematogaster was first recognized as an undescribed species separate from Crematogaster ashmeadi by William Buren. After retiring, Buren moved to Florida, where he retained his interest in Crematogaster. Hand-labeled specimens in Buren’s collection show he believed that the common southeastern C. ashmeadi included a second, previously unrecognized species distinguished by its red and black coloration. His student James Trager also knew of this species, as evidenced by specimens of Crematogaster pinicola collected in 1981 at the Archbold Biological Station and labeled by him “Crematogaster n. sp.” Buren probably would have described this species, but he became ill and died in 1983. The same ant is also the “undescribed species” of Crematogaster referred to by Deyrup and Trager (1986). In his review of eastern Crematogaster, Johnson (1988) was the first to address the problem of separate color forms in C. ashmeadi in print, but he did not arrive at a definite conclusion concerning their biological basis. We believe the accumulated evidence supports the hypothesis that the red and black form of Crematogaster ashmeadi is, in fact, a valid sibling species.

Worker
Measurements (mm) (holotype in parenthesis): total length: 2.31-3.64 (3.22); head width at eyes: 0.67-0.90 (0.87); length of antennal scape: 0.44-0.60 (0.60); distance from mesothoracic spiracle to propodeal spiracle: 0.23-0.33 (0.31); distance from lower edge of propodeal spiracle to tip of propodeal spine: 0.12-0.17 (0.16). Head: in frontal view, posterior half smooth, shining, covered with sparse appressed silvery hairs separated at their bases by a distance slightly shorter than length of a hair; orientation of hairs convergent toward lower midline of frons; frons with a series of erect hairs in a line just mesad of imaginary vertical lines extending up from frontal carinae, 4 hairs on right side, 3 on left (in holotype); fine striae covering malar area, extending up about 1/3 of way along eye on inner side. Antennal scape with appressed hairs only. mandible with 4 teeth. Mesosoma: pronotum with one standing curved humeral hair on each side; pronotum and mesonotum with sparse appressed silvery hairs, with bases separated by more than half length of a hair and less than twice length of a hair; pronotum and mesonotum shining, with very faint shagreening; mesopleuron finely, evenly reticulate up to level of mesothoracic spiracle; metapleuron with longitudinal carinae covering its upper 3/4, fine reticulations between more widely spaced carinae; propodeal spine in lateral view wedge-shaped, sharply pointed, with a fine dorsal carina; dorsal areas of propodeum with sparse, appressed silvery hairs divergent from the midline; all legs with sparse, appressed, silvery hairs. Gaster: First tergite sparsely covered with longitudinally oriented, appressed, silvery hairs whose bases are slightly closer together than the length of a hair; submarginal bands of similar, but longer hairs on tergites 1 - 3; a sparse submarginal band of erect hairs on tergites and sternites 1 - 4. Color: Body and appendages except for gaster ferruginous; gaster black.

Queen
From nest of holotype. Measurements (mm): total length: 7.48-7.90; head width at eyes: 1.44-1.54; length of mesosoma (lateral view): 2.20-2.45; length of forewing: 6.46-6.84. Head, legs, body reddish brown, except mesonotum, scutellum blackish brown, gaster black; wings hyaline, major veins pale testaceous. Mandible with 5 teeth, mandibular striae with sparse, coarse punctures; median ocellus separated from lateral ocelli by about 1.8 times diameter of lateral ocellus; anterior half of dorsum of head finely striate, including clypeus, except for lower median area of frons; posterior half of dorsum of head shining, finely punctate, with appressed hairs. Mesonotum strongly shining, no reticulate areas; fine striations on lateral margins of mesonotum and posterior quarter of mesopleuron; metapleuron coarsely but evenly striate, propodeum coarsely, unevenly striate; gaster shining, first gastral tergite with appressed hairs slightly longer than distance between their bases, and a few scattered, suberect longer hairs.

Male
From nest of holotype. Measurements (mm): total length: 3.02-3.24; head width at eyes: 0.62-0.66; length of mesosoma (lateral view): 1.06-1.30; length of forewing: 2.87-3.13. Head and body blackish brown; femora medium brown, lighter than head and body; tibiae, tarsi, mandibles testaceous; wings hyaline with no infuscation, heavier veins pale testaceous. Mandible with 3 subequal teeth; median ocellus separated from lateral ocelli by twice diameter of lateral ocellus; head with sparse sub-appressed hairs, those on occipital area procumbent, about as long as distance between their bases; hairs on frons convergent toward midline; frons with a few conspicuous large punctures on each side; malar space weakly striate; area between eye and antennal sockets not striate; antennal scape shorter than last antennal segment. Mesosoma shining, without reticulate areas, smooth except for weak, fine striations on lateral areas of mesonotum and posterior fourth of mesopleuron, metapleuron more coarsely striate; mesonotum with sparse, short hairs embedded in elongate punctures, usually farther apart than length of a hair; wing venation as in figure 2; gaster smooth, shining, first gastral tergite with short, appressed, embedded hairs.

Type Material
USA: Florida: Highlands County, Archbold Biological Station, 24-VI-1996, M. Deyrup. Florida Scrub habitat. Nest in 6 cm diameter branch of Pinus elliottii in firelane. The entire type series is from a single colony. Holotype and 37 paratypes deposited in the Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Deposition of additional paratypes: 24 workers, 2 alate queens, 2 males: Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, Los Angeles, California; 17 workers, 2 alate queens, 1 male: Florida State Collection of Arthropods, Gainesville; 17 workers, 2 alate queens, 1 male: National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.; 14 workers, 1 alate queen, 1 male: The Natural History Museum, London; 12 workers: collection of William Mackay, El Paso, Tex.; remaining type material: Archbold Biological Station, Lake Placid, Florida.

Etymology
The specific epithet is derived from Latin: “pine dweller.”