Abstract
This description is based on two specimens which were collected by the junior author on August 25, 1930, from a colony of Ponera opaciceps Mayr, beneath the bark of a pine tree at Landon, Mississippi. That the specimens are not callow workers, as first supposed by the junior author from a superficial examination of them in the field, is clearly indicated by their 13-segmented antennae, the general shape of their bodies, and the prominent genital appendages at the apex of their gasters.
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