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J. Heinze.
Leptothorax wilsoni n. sp., a new parasitic ant from eastern North America (Hymenoptera; Formicidae).
Psyche 96:49-62, 1989.

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LEPTOTHORAX WILSONI N. SP., A NEW PARASITIC ANT FROM EASTERN NORTH AMERICA
(HY MENOPTERA: FORMICIDAE)*
Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University Cambridge, Mass. 02138, USA
Wherever populations of ants are dense, social parasitic species can occur. Parasitic ants are dependent on workers of another spe- cies for all or a portion of their life-cycle. They often exhibit fasci- nating behaviors such as slave-raids, e.g. in Polyergus rufescens and Harpagoxenus sublaevis, the throttling or decapitation of host queens by Epimyrma or Bothriomyrmex respectively, or riding like an ectoparasite on the back of the host queen in Teleutomyrmex schneideri (Wilson, 197 1 ; Buschinger, 1987). Social parasites are unusually common in the myrmicine tribe Leptothoracini. For example, Leptothorax acervorum, an ant common in alpine and boreal forests throughout northern and cen- tral Europe, is host to four different parasitic species: the slave- maker Harpagoxenus sublaevis and the workerless Doronomyrpex goesswaldi, D. kutteri, and D. pads (Buschinger, 1971). In North America, however, the vast populations of several species closely related to L. acervorum (currently synonymized under L. "musco- rum "by Brown, 1955), are parasitized only by Harpagoxenus cana- densis in the northeast (Creighton, 1950) and the inquiline L. faberi, known only from its type locality in Alberta (Buschinger, I98 1). The status of a third species, Doronomyrmex pocahontas, formerly thought to be a workerless parasite (Buschinger, 1979), is unclear (Heinze and Buschinger, unpubl. data).
In this paper I report findings of a new, apparently workerless parasitic Leptothorax from Mount Monadnock, Cheshire Co., New Hampshire. The new parasite has small, brachypterous queens characterized by an alitrunk notably reduced in size. The host spe- cies is a large, black Leptothorax "muscorum"-group form that *Manuscript received by the editor February 22, 1989. 49




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50 Psyche [VOI. 96
has provisionally been termed Leptothorax sp. B in previous publi- cations (Heinze and Buschinger 1987, 1988). The L. "muscorum "- complex will be revised by A. Francoeur, Universite du Quebec, Chicoutimi.
An additional queen collected in a colony of Leptothorax sp. B on Mt. du Lac des Cygnes, P. N. des Grands Jardins, Quebec, is very similar to the females from Mount Monadnock but possesses a bulky, fully developed thorax. In this paper the Quebec queen is considered to be conspecific with the Mount Monadnock specimens and the Monadnock and Quebec queens are regarded as intermor- phic and gynomorphic forms of one species. This is an example of queen polymorphism, a phenomenon that occurs in some other leptothoracine ants, too: in the genus Formicoxenus (Francoeur et al., 1985), in Harpagoxenus sublaevis (Buschinger and Winter, 1975), and in two independent species from eastern North America, Leptothorax sphagnicolus (Francoeur, 1986) and the undescribed Leptothorax sp. A (Heinze and Buschinger, 1987). The measure- ments follow the definitions given in Francoeur et al., 1985. Leptothorax wilsoni, n. sp.
Fig. la, b
Holotype female: an intermorphic queen from Mt. Monadnock. Total length appr. 3.1 mm, head length 0.63 (excluding mandi- bles), head width 0.56 (behind eyes), scape length 0.45, maximum eye diameter 0.16, alitrunk length (Weber's) 0.79, pronotal alitrunk width 0.41, length of petiole in lateral view 0.26, height of petiole at node in lateral view 0.30, maximum width of petiole 0.16, length of postpetiole 0.17, height of postpetiole 0.25, maximum width of postpetiole 0.30, length of forewing 1.12, length of hind femur 0.50, length of hind tibia 0.40.
The habitus of the holotype (figs. la, lb, 2a, 3) is similar in general to other queens of the subgenus Leptothorax s.str. M. R. Smith (= Mychothorax Ruzsky) with the exception of the mandi- bles and the alitrunk. The subapical mandibular teeth are extremely reduced in size and visible only as an undulation of the masticatory border (fig. lb). The alitrunk is strongly reduced in volume com- pared to that of the normal (gynomorphic) queen of this species (fig. 2b) and other gynomorphic Leptothorax s. str. queens (e.g., fig. 2c). No sclerites are fused, however, in contrast to the extensive fusion



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Heinze - Leptothorax wilsoni
KBW
1 rnm
Fig. 1 : Intermorphic female of Leptothorax wilsoni in lateral view (1 a) and head in frontal view (I b).
seen in intermorphic females of Harpagoxenus sublaevis or Lepto- thorax sp.A. Head as in fig. lb. Antennae 11-segmented with a 3-jointed apical club; maxillary palps 5-segmented, labial palps 3- segmented. Propodeal spines short, Propodeal spine index (Busch- inger, 1966) appr. 1.4. Petiole in dorsal view subcylindrical. In profile petiole lacking an anterior peduncle; node prominent, trian- gular, with straight sides and a narrowly rounded apex. Subpetiolar process large and terminating anteriorly in a broadly angular tooth (fig. lb). Lateral edges of petiole at base of node terminate ante- riorly in two small but distinct teeth. Petiolar node apex viewed from rear flat. Maximum diameter of postpetiole in dorsal view (measured across broadly convex anterior margin) 1.7 times broader than maximum diameter of petiole, 1.5 times broader than the posterior margin, and distinctly trapezoidal in shape (fig. 3). In profile postpetiole with evenly rounded dorsal surface and well- developed anteroventral tooth. Head foveate-reticulate (sensu Har- ris, 1979), excepting a broad, median strip on the ventral surface that is smooth and shining. Alitrunk, petiole and postpetiole densely foveate-reticulate, gaster smooth and shining. Body sparsely covered



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Psyche
[Vol. 96
Fig. 2: Lateral view of intermorphic (2a) and gynomorphic (2b) females of L. wilsoni, and of a queen (2c) and a worker (2d) of the host species, Leptothorax sp. B of the "L. muscorum"-group.




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19891 Heinze - Leptothorax wilsoni 53
with short, stiff erect and suberect hairs; erect or suberect hairs absent on petiole. Legs with sparse, appressed, short hairs and scat- tered erect hairs. Antenna1 scape with moderately abundant appressed hairs and a few erect hairs clustered at distal end; funicu- lus with dense suberect hairs. Numerous very short, erect hairs pres- ent on compound eyes. Maximum length of erect hairs on body 0.06 mm. Coloration blackish-red with neck, mandibles and legs some- what lighter, antennae brown with a darker apical club. Paratypes: intermorphic females from Mt. Monadnock. The two paratype intermorphic females differ little from the holo- type. One paratype is slightly smaller than the other two females (head length 0.59 mm, head width 0.53). In both paratypes the petiole in dorsal view is weakly hourglass-shaped, not subcylindri- cal, and in one specimen the node apex viewed from the rear is weakly concave, not flat. In addition, in side view, the anterior and posterior faces of the petiole are weakly convex in both specimens. All three intermorphic females are wingless. However, some addi- tional females taken in the field have had wings. These are strongly reduced in size, being 1 / 4- 1 / 2 as long as the expected normal wing size for a Leptothorax queen the size of the L. wilsoni. In addition, the forewing venation differs markedly from that seen in other Lep- tothorax s. str. (fig. 4). Intermorphic females of L. wilsoni are there- fore brachypterous. The literature mentions only few other exam- ples of brachyptery in ants, among them Nothomyrmecia macrops (Taylor, 1978), Monomorium subapterum and M. rubriceps "cinc- turn " (Wheeler, 19 17), and Pogonomyrmex huachucanus (Cole, 1968). Brachypterous females also occur in Vollenhovia emeryi, a species from Japan that is now established in the District of Colum- bia, USA (S. Cover, pers. comm.)
Paratype: gynomorphic queen from Quebec. Fig. 2b. Total length 3.28 mm, head length 0.63, head width 0.56, scape length 0.47, maximum eye diameter 0.19, alitrunk length 0.97, ali- trunk width 0.55, length of petiole 0.28, height of petiole 0.3 1, width of petiole 0.16, length of postpetiole 0.17, height of postpetiole 0.25, width of postpetiole 0.31, length of hind femur 0.51, length of hind tibia 0.42.
The gynomorph differs from the holotype in its bulky, fully deve- loped alitrunk (fig. 2b). In addition, the petiole in dorsal view is



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54 Psyche [vo~. 96
hourglass-shaped, the node apex in rearview is distinctly concave, and in profile its anterior and posterior faces are weakly convex and concave respectively.
Paratype: male from Mt. Monadnock. Fig. 3. Total length appr. 3.4 mm, head length 0.50, head width 0.52, maximum eye diameter 0.23, alitrunk length 1.1 1, alitrunk width 0.52, length of petiole 0.33, height of petiole 0.20, width of petiole 0.16, length of postpetiole 0.17, height of postpetiole 0.23, width of postpetiole 0.25, length of forewing 3.05, length of hindwing 2.35, length of hind femur 0.66, length of hind tibia 0.59. Fig. 3: Dorsal view of an intermorphic female of A. wilwni.



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19891 Heinze - Leptothorax wilsoni 5 5
Habitus in general like males of other Leptothorax s. str. Alitrunk with Mayrian furrows. Propodeum lacking teeth or spines. Petiole lacking anterior peduncle, node low and much rounded, anteroven- tral tooth very small. Postpetiole with a distinct ventral tooth (fig. 5). Head, much of the alitrunk and the petiole foveate-reticulate, the sculpturing in general somewhat weaker than in females. The post- petiole is largely smooth and shining except for weak foveate- reticulate sculpturing on the ventral surface and traces of it on the sides. Compound eye with scattered short, erect hairs. Body covered with tapering, curved, suberect hairs. Coloration blackish-red. Type locality: holotype, intermorphic paratype females, and male. Mt. Monadnock, Cheshire Co., in southern New Hampshire, USA. The type specimens were collected in an open, scrubby forest (canopy height varying from 1.5-3 m) of birches, alders, mountain- ash, spruce, and pine that is revegetating a forest site previously destroyed by fire. The precise location is along the "white-dot-trail" at 700-800 m in elevation.
Gynomorphic paratype: The gynomorphic female was found on Mont du Lac des Cygnes, Parque National des Grands Jardins, Quebec, Canada, at about 950 m in elevation near the tree line in a habitat with thoroughly arctic vegetation (black spruce, dwarf birch, lichen).
Derivatio nominis:
The ant is dedicated to Prof. Dr. E. 0. Wilson, MCZ, Harvard University, Cambridge, especially since it was found, as he put it, "in the backyard of Harvard University."
Disposition of types:
Holotype female, the gynomorphic female and the paratype male, and voucher specimens of the host species are deposited in the Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass. One intermorphic paratype female each has been deposited in the British Museum, London, and in the Los Angeles County Museum, Los Angeles.
Diagnosis (Fig. 2):
Both gynomorphic and intermorphic queens of L. wilsoni are easily distinguished from queens of all sympatric Leptothorax s. str. (L. retractus. L. sphagnicolus, L. acervorum, L. spp. A, and B) by



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Psyche [vo~. 96
Fig. 4: Right forewing of an intermorphic female of L. wilsoni (top) and the female of the host species, L. sp. B (bottom).
their rudimentary subapical mandibular teeth, relatively short propodeal spines, the strongly developed postpetiolar tooth, and the distinctive foveate-reticulate sculpturing of the head, alitrunk, peti- ole, and postpetiole (Note: foveate-reticulate sculpturing is found in other species but is often mixed with rugulae or replaced by weak rugoreticulate sculpture.) The rudimentary subapical mandibular teeth are an especially distinctive feature. The only other Leptothor- acines with this trait (the genus Harpagoxenus) are larger than L. wilsoni, lack foveate-reticulate scupture, and possess distinctive antenna1 scrobes. Pending the discovery of additional specimens, L. wilsoni males may be tentatively distinguished by the fine foveate- reticulate sculpturing that covers the entire petiole, giving it a weakly shining surface. In males of all other sympatric Leptothorax s. str., at least the dorsal third of the node is smooth and shining; frequently most or all of the node, and sometimes the entire petiole as well is largely free of sculpturing and strongly shining. One intermorphic female of L. wilsoni was dissected. The ovary consisted of a receptable and six ovarioles. The Dufour's gland was large compared to that in females of the host species. Biological observations:
Field data provide some information on the ecology of L. wilsoni. Mt. Monadnock:
1) July, 14, 1988. One colony, containing four brachypterous,



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19891 Heinze - Leptothorax wilsoni 57
intermorphic females, several L. wilsoni and host males, eight Lep- tothorax sp. B workers, and brood. No fertile queen was found. The colony nested in a rotten stick with a diameter of about 3 cm. (1 paratype female, paratype male)
2) July, 18, 1988. One dealate, intermorphic female, collected in the early afternoon on a stone. (paratype female) 3) July, 18, 1988. One dealate, intermorphic female, collected in moss together with a colony of Leptothorax sp. A, a species closely related to L. sp. B (Heinze and Buschinger, 1987). The L. wilsoni female was attacked by the L. sp. A workers and died two days later. (holotype)
4) October, 19, 1988. One colony, consisting of a fertile, physo- gastric L. wilsoni intermorph, several dozen host-workers, two host females, and brood, nesting in a rotten stick of about 5 cm diameter. The two host females were dissected, they both were inseminated, the ovarioles however, were undeveloped and contained no corpora lutea.
Fig. 5: Propodeurn, petiole and postpetiole of males of L. wilsoni (top) and the host species, L. sp. B. (bottom).




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58 Psyche [vo~. 96
In total, 64 colonies of Leptothorax sp. B and 43 colonies of the closely related Leptothorax sp. A were collected on Mt. Monad- nock. Two colonies of L. sp. B were parasitized by L. wilsoni. Mt. du Lac des Cygnes:
5) July, 23, 1988. One colony with a gynomorphic female, several host workers, and two larvae. The colony was nesting under a rotten branch.
At Mt. du Lac des Cygnes 14 colonies of Leptothorax sp. B and 12 of L. sp. A were examined.
Apparently L. wilsoni is a workerless species that parasitizes col- onies of an undescribed large black or dark brown L. "muscorum'~ provisionally named Leptothorax sp. B (fig. 2c, d). Since no fertile host queen was found in the three colonies taken in the field, most probably L. wilsoni does not accept the host queen. It thus is not a truly inquiline parasite like Doronomyrmex kutteri or Leptothorax faberi, in which the host queen is allowed to remain in the nest, but resembles Doronomyrmex goesswaldi, in which host queens are eliminated (Buschinger and Klump, 1988). Four winged females of Leptothorax wilsoni, which were col- lected on July 14 at Mt. Monadnock, were kept in the laboratory at room temperature, together with the host workers and males of both the host species and the parasite. Males of both species were very nervous early in the morning as soon as 5:30 a.m.; all activity, however, ended at about 9:30 a.m. No mating was observed, but three days after the collection all four females had shed their wings. On August 4 fighting among the dealate parasites was observed, the females attempted to sting each other and tore at legs, antennae and postpetiole. After one female had successfully been adopted by cal- lows of a Leptothorax sp. B-colony from Mt. Monadnock, a young L. wilsoni female was put into a queenright host colony. Aggressive behavior of host workers toward the female was not observed. The L. wilsoni female apparently avoided contact with the host workers and during the first hours gathered herself with the host males in the nest, grooming and licking them, especially the mouthparts and prothorax. One day later the L. wilsoni female was found clinging to the postpetiole of the host queen with her mandi- bles and trying to sting her. These attacks, which lasted for only several minutes each, continued for some hours. No successful sting- ing, however, could be observed; the stinger slid off the sclerites of



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19891 Heinze - Leptothorax wilsoni 59
the host queen's gaster. Nevertheless, only half an hour after the first observation of fighting the host queen appeared shaky and shivery, and held her gaster in an unnatural angle. Finally the host queen left the nest; she was found dead outside the nest on day three of the experiment.
Of the two females that remained in the original colony from Mt. Monadnock, one was attacked by the other on August 9. The extremities and antennae of the attacked female were cut off, and eventually she died.
Further experiments will give some more detailed informations on colony-foundation behavior and regulation of queen number in this species.
Male and female of Leptothorax wilsoni are described. The spe- cies apparently is workerless and parasitizes colonies of a species belonging to the Leptothorax "muscorum7'group (sp. B). Nests of the new species were found on Mt. Monadnock, New Hampshire, USA. L. wilsoni has brachypterous females with a reduced thorax, a gynomorphic parasitic female from Mt. du Lac des Cygnes, Quebec, Canada, most probably belongs to the same species. L. wilsoni differs from its host species and other Leptothorax in the reduction of subapical mandibular teeth, the relatively short propodeal spines, and the distinctive foveate-reticulate sculpturing of the head, ali- trunk, petiole and postpetiole.
I am grateful to Stefan Cover, MCZ, Cambridge, whose excellent fieldwork provided some of the specimens from Mt. Monadnock, and whose helpful comments strongly improved the description. M. Moffett, MCZ, Cambridge, and A. Buschinger, TH Darmstadt, gave valuable comments on the manuscript. Figures 1 to 3 were drawn by Kathy Brown-Wing. The studies were made possible by a NATO Science Council grant via the DAAD. Shortly after this manuscript had been submitted, additional colonies of Leptothorax wilsoni were found on Mt. Monadnock



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60 Psyche [vo~. 96
and at a new locality in New Brunswick, Canada. On April 24,1989, a colony, containing a fertile intermorphic female of L. wilsoni, L. wilsoni brood, several Leptothorax sp. B. workers, and an unin- seminated L. sp. B female, was collected in a pine forest off Berry's Mills Road, Moncton, Westmorland Co., New Brunswick (R. J. Stuart, University of Vermont, Burlington, pers. comm.). On May 18, 1989, two colonies, each containing an intermorphic L. wilsoni queen, brood, and L. sp. B workers, were collected at the type locality on Mt. Monadnock, New Hampshire. BROWN, W. L.
1955. The ant Leptothorax muscorum (Nylander) in North America. Ent. News 66: 43-50.
BUSCHINGER, A.
1966. Leptothorax (Mychothorax) muscorum Nyl. und L. (M.) gredleri Mayr zwei gute Arten. Ins. Soc. 13: 165-172. 1971. Zur Verbreitung der Sozialparasiten von Leptothorax acervorum (Fabr.) (Hym., Formicidae). Bonner Zool. Beitr. 22: 322-331. 1979. Doronomyrmexpocahontas n. sp., a parasitic ant from Alberta, Canada (Hym., Formicidae). Ins. Soc. 26: 216-222. 1981.
Leptothorax faberi n. sp., an apparently parasitic ant from Jasper National Park, Canada (Hymenoptera: Formicidae). Psyche 89: 197-209. 1987.
Evolution of social parasitism in ants. TREE 1: 155-160. BUSCHINGER, A. AND KLUMP, B.
1988. Novel strategy of host-colony exploitation in a permanently parasitic ant, Doronomyrmex goesswaldi. Naturwissenschaften 75: 577-578. BUSCHINGER, A. AND WINTER, U.
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COLE, A. C.
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1986. Deux nouvelles fourmis nkarctiques: Leptothorax retractus et Lepto- thorax sphagnicolus (Formicidae, Hymenoptera). Can. Ent. 118: 1151-1 164.
FRANCOEUR, A. LOISELLE, R., AND BUSCHINGER, A. 1985. Biosystematique de la tribu Leptothoracini (Formicidae, Hymenoptera). 1. Le genre Formicoxenus dans la region holarctique. Naturaliste can. (Rev. Ecol. Syst.) 112: 343-403.




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HARRIS, R. A.
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Electrophoretic variability of esterases in the ant tribe Leptothoracini. Biochem. Syst. Ecol. 16: 217-221.
TAYLOR, R. W.
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Nothomyrmecia macrops: a living-fossil ant rediscovered. Science 201: 979-985.
WHEELER, W. M.
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The phylogenetic development of subapterous and apterous castes in the Formicidae. Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. 3: 107-1 17. WILSON, E. 0.
1971. The insect societies. Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, Cam- bridge, MA, 548 pp.




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