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microrobert
04-01-2014, 08:13 PM
Six New Dracula Ants Discovered in Madagascar

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Six new species of Dracula ants from the Malagasy region have been discovered by scientists at the California Academy of Sciences. The discoveries, by postdoctoral fellow Masashi Yoshimura from Japan and curator of entomology Brian L. Fisher, represent a completely new twist in the typically rigid caste system of ants, where anatomy is typically destiny. The study was published in the open access journal ZooKeys.

“The genus Mystrium is the most mysterious group within the bizarre Dracula ants,” said Yoshimura.

Mystrium species have unique features such as long, spatulate mandibles that snap together; wingless queens that in some undetermined species are even smaller than workers; and large, wingless individuals intermediate between workers and queens, which behave like queens.

“Mystrium was a difficult group to identify because of the remarkable variation within each species,” Yoshimura said. “To name three of the species we chose words that evoke the air of mystery around this genus, calling them Mystrium labyrinth, Mystrium mirror, and Mystrium shadow.”

“Our team has explored Madagascar and its surrounding islands for 20 years and collected thousands of specimens to solve the mysteries of Mystrium,” said Fisher, an expert on Malagasy ants.

Fisher explained why Mystrium poses such a fiendish problem to taxonomists.

“Mystrium has three different styles in reproduction within a single genus, and the role of an individual in a colony is not always obvious by its appearance. Ants that look similar may be minor workers in one species but queens in another species,” he said, which makes classifying the Dracula ants extremely difficult.

“The discovery of the division of females into major and minor forms was the key to solving this complicated puzzle,” explained Yoshimura. “We found that all species in Mystrium share common original components consisting of male, a large queen, and major and minor workers.

Furthermore, the major or minor workers develop as reproductives in some species and even take over the queen’s position. They are revolutionaries in the anatomy-is-destiny world of ants! Taxonomists usually compare the anatomy of ants of the same caste to find differences between species. But in the case of the genus Mystrium, we need to compare individuals from the same original phenotype, not on the their current functional role (caste).”

The authors have reclassified all species into three subgroups based on the reproductive styles, and have developed a new taxonomic framework for this complicated group featuring innovative pictorial keys to the species.

The illustrations include color photographs showing every hair in focus (produced using a computer-assisted method called auto-montage), and drawings for all castes.

Six New Dracula Ants Discovered in Madagascar ? Entomology Today (http://entomologytoday.org/2014/04/01/six-new-dracula-ants-discovered-in-madagascar/)