Pseudomyrmex elongatus

Nests in dead twigs of a variety of trees.

Identification
See the nomenclature section.

Distribution
This taxon was described from Colombia. It is also found in Paraguay, Ecuador, Brazil, Peru, Venezuela, Suriname, French Guiana, Guyana, Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, Panama, Costa Rica, Trinidad and Tobago and the United States.

Biology
Ward (1985) - P. elongatus nests in dead twigs in a variety of woody shrubs and trees. I have collected P. elongatus colonies in twigs of Avicennia germinans, Baccharis halimifolia, Laguncularia racemosa and Rhizophora mangle in Florida, and in Gliricidia sepium, Helicteres, and Inga in Costa Rica and Panama. Among museum material there are records of P. elongatus nesting in a "climbing vine" and "mangrove stems" in Florida, in Quercus virginiana and Prosopis (Texas), and in Quercus fusiformis (Nuevo Leon, Mexico).

Nomenclature

 *  elongatus. Pseudomyrma elongata Mayr, 1870a: 413 (w.) COLOMBIA. Wheeler, W.M. 1905b: 86 (q.m.); Wheeler, G.C. & Wheeler, J. 1973d: 207 (l.). Combination in Leptalea: Smith, M.R. 1951a: 788; in Pseudomyrmex: Wheeler, G.C. & Wheeler, J. 1956: 384. Senior synonym of tandem: Creighton, 1957b: 18; of alliodorae (and its junior synonym allidora): Ward, 1989: 419. See also: Ward, 1985b: 227; Ward, 1999b: 519.
 * tandem. Pseudomyrma elongata var. tandem Forel, 1906d: 228 (w.) COSTA RICA. Junior synonym of elongatus: Creighton, 1957b: 18.
 * alliodorae. Pseudomyrma alliodorae Wheeler, W.M. 1942: 157, pl. 47, fig. a (w.q.) PANAMA. Wheeler, G.C. & Wheeler, J. 1956: 379 (l.). Combination in Pseudomyrmex: Wheeler, G.C. & Wheeler, J. 1956: 379. Senior synonym of allidora: Brown, 1949a: 42. Junior synonym of elongatus: Ward, 1989: 419.
 * allidora. Pseudomyrma allidora Enzmann, E.V. 1944: 77 (w.) PANAMA. Junior synonym of alliodorae: Brown, 1949a: 42.

Ward (1985): This is the smaller of two elongatus-like species in North America. I am considering it conspecific with P. elongatus Mayr on the basis of (i) the original description of P. elongates, particularly the indication that HL is 1.5 times HW, and (ii) worker material from Costa Rica (leg. Biolley) determined as P. elongatus by Mayr and Forel. There is a confusing variety of elongatus-like forms in Central and South America, which require detailed taxonomic study. Until such a study is carried out, it seems expedient to refer to the North American species as P. elongatus and to leave P. tandem Forel as a provisional synonym.

Pseudomyrmex subater Wheeler & Mann (1914), originally described as a subspecies of P. elongatus, was recognized as a distinct species by Creighton (1955). It may be distinguished from P. elongatus and Pseudomyrmex cubaensis by the shinier integument, conspicuous pilosity (grading insensibly from appressed pubescence to fine suberect and erect setae), broad head (CI 0.83-0.88), short eyes (REL2 0.54-0.58 in P. subater, > 0.62 in P. elongatus and P. cubaensis), distinct petiolar shape (gradually inclined anterior face rounded into a sharply declining posterior fact: so that NI 0.61-0.72), and conspicuous anteroventral tooth on the postpetiole. Apart from two "cotype" workers in the from Haiti, I have seen material of P. subater (misidentifiedd as P. elongatus) from the Bahamas (Andros Island, Nassau) and the same, or a closely related species, from Jamaica (Kingston). Wheeler's (1905) record of "elongatus" from the Bahamas appears to be based on a combination of P. subater and P. cubaensis, judging from material in the MCZ.

Recent collections of P. subater from the Bahamas by Blaine Cole show that this species has striking bright orange queens, which look superficially like those of P. pallidus. Cole also made a collection from a single Cladium culm which contained both 'P. subater' and P. cubaensis workers. These findings suggest that Wheeler's (1905) and Mann's (1920) records of dulotic associations between "flavidula" and "elongata" may have been based in part on pure colonies of 'P. subater', or mixed colonies of 'P. subater' and P. cubaensis.

Worker
Ward (1985) - Measurements (n = 24, except for HL, HW, CI, REL, REL2, and PLI, where n = 50): HL 0.78-0.91, HW 0.56-0.64, MFC 0.013-0.024, CI 0.68-0.74, OI 0.52-0.58, REL 0.50-0.58, REL2 0.73-0.82. OOI 0.13-0.48, VI 0.82-0.90, FCI 0.021-0.041, SI 0.42-0.48, SI2 0.55-0.64, FI 0.45-0.56, PDI 0.95-1.45. MPI 0.036-0.072, NI 0.55-0.63, PLI 0.76-0.91, PWI 0.62-0.74, PPWI 1.09-1.40.

Diagnosis. —A small, brown species with elongate head and eyes (HW 0.56-0.64, CI 0.68-0.74); frontal carinae subcontiguous; occipital margin flat or slightly concave, in full-face dorsal view; basal and declivitous faces of propodeum well differentiated; petiole short, broad, and rounded (PLI 0.76-0.91); postpetiole wider than long. Head densely punctate and usually more or less opaque; remainder of body finely punctate or coriarious-imbricate, varying from opaque to sublucid. Erect pilosity and fine appressed pubescence present on most parts of body, including mesonotum and propodeum; fourth abdominal tergite with a rather dense mat of appressed pubescence.

Type Material
Ward (1985) - Syntype worker(s), Colombia. (Lindig) (not in ) (not examined).

Pseudomyrma elangata var. tandem Forel. 1906. p. 228. Syntype workers. EI Hiquito, near San Mateo, Costa Rica (P. Biolley) (Examined).