Species: Pyramica gundlachi

Author: John T. Longino

Taxonomic Hierarchy:

Subfamily: Myrmicinae Genus: Pyramica

Distribution:

Full Range: southern Mexico south to Peru and across to Venezuela, on many Caribbean islands, and in Florida; absent from Amazonian lowlands.

Costa Rican Range: Atlantic and southern Pacific lowlands, Cordillera de Tilaran, Cordillera de Guanacaste.

Biology:

Original Description:

Pyramica gundlachi Roger 1862:253, pl 1, fig. 18. Lectotype worker (by designation of Brown 1960:40): Cuba (Gundlach) [NMV].

Later moved to Strumigenys, then back to Pyramica. See Bolton (2000) for complete synonymy.

Natural History:

Members of the genus are all predaceous, with a static pressure mode of attack (Bolton 1999).

Brown (1960) reported

E. O. Wilson (unpubl. notes) kept a colony of gundlachi for over a month in Cuba, during which time it captured and consumed entomobryoid and sminthurid collembolans, but ignored poduroids, a small cricket nymph, various mites and minute millipeds. Hunting is usually of the relatively immobile ambush type, which is to say that the ants approach the prey and, when close enough to detect its position, freeze with mandibles held open toward it... However, sometimes workers approach the prey and strike quickly and directly, without waiting. If prey is struck and continues to struggle, it is lifted off the ground and stung...

McCluskey and I found this species in nearly every berlesate of upper soil and leaf litter that we examined on Barro Colorado Island; it is evidently there the most common dacetine species and one of the more frequent ant species of the forest floor. Wilson found gundlachi to be somewhat less abundant in Veracruz. Although it is abundant in tropical rain forest, it also lives in second-growth forest, thickets, and cacao plantations.

In Costa Rica gundlachi is very common in moist to wet lowland forest. It also occurs in the very wet mid-elevation forest of the Atlantic slope of the Tilaran and Guanacaste Cordilleras, but has not been observed in similar habitats in the Cordillera Central (in spite of many Winkler samples from mid-elevation sites in Braulio Carrillo National Park). It occurs in the moist evergreen forest band on the Pacific slopes of the Tilaran and Guanacaste Cordilleras, but does not occur in nearby cloud forest.

Taxonomic History (provided by Barry Bolton, 2010)

gundlachi. Pyramica gundlachi Roger, 1862a: 253, pl. 1, fig. 18 (w.) CUBA. Brown, 1960b: 44 (q.). Combination in Strumigenys: Roger, 1863b: 40; in S. (Pyramica): Brown, 1948e: 110; in Pyramica: Bolton, 1999: 1673. Senior synonym of banillensis, berlesei, bierigi, infuscata, isthmica, vincentensis: Brown, 1960b: 40. See also: Bolton, 2000: 186.

References:

Bolton, B. 1999. Ant genera of the tribe Dacetonini (Hymenoptera: Formicidae). Journal of Natural History 33:1639-1689.

Bolton, B. 2000. The ant tribe Dacetini, with a revision of the Strumigenys species of the Malagasy Region by Brian L. Fisher, and a revision of the Austral epopostrumiform genera by Steven O. Shattuck. Memoirs of the American Entomological Institute 65:1-1028.

Brown, W. L., Jr. 1960 (1959). The neotropical species of the ant genus Strumigenys Fr. Smith: Group of gundlachi (Roger). Psyche 66:37-52.

Roger, J. 1862. Einige neue exotische Ameisen-Gattungen und Arten. Berl. Entomol. Z. 6:233-254.

4 Specimens Imaged | View All 945 Specimens for this species


CASENT0103799

CASENT0103867

CASENT0178639

CASENT0178650


Enlarge Map

TOOLS:

View:
- See Specimens for this species (945 examples)
- Pyramica gundlachi in Google Earth

Field Guide:
- Take a PDF of this species into the field with you

Comparison Tool:
- Compare images of the Specimens within this species

Catalog:
- See Hymenoptera Name Server