Abstract

The paper integrates two independent studies of numeric morphology-based alpha-taxonomy of the cryptic ant species Temnothorax crassispinus (Karavajev, 1926) and Temnothorax crasecundus sp. n. conducted by different investigators, using different equipment, considering different character combinations and evaluating different samples. Samples investigated included 603 individual workers from 203 nests – thereof 104 nest samples measured by Seifert and 99 by Csösz. The material originated from Europe, Asia Minor and Caucasia. There was a very strong interspecific overlap in any of the 29 shape characters recorded and subjective expert determination failed in many cases. Primary classification hypotheses were formed by the exploratory data analysis Nest Centroid (NC) clustering and corrected to final species hypotheses by an iterative linear discriminant analysis algorithm. The evaluation of Seifert’s and Csösz’s data sets arrived at fully congruent conclusions. NC-Ward and NC-K-means clustering disagreed from the final species hypothesis in only 1.9 and 1.9% of the samples in Seifert’s data set and by 1.1 and 2.1% in Csösz’s data set which is a strong argument for heterospecificity. The type series of Temnothorax crassispinus and Temnothorax crasecundus sp. n. were allocated to different clusters with p = 0.9851 and p = 0.9912 respectively. The type series of the junior synonym Temnothorax slavonicus (Seifert, 1995) was allocated to the Temnothorax crassispinus cluster with p = 0.9927. Temnothorax crasecundus sp. n. and Temnothorax crassispinus are parapatric species with a long contact zone stretching from the Peloponnisos peninsula across Bulgaria northeast to the southern Ukraine. There is no indication for occurrence of interspecifically mixed nests or intraspecific polymorphism. However, a significant reduction of interspecific morphological distance at sites with syntopic occurrence of both species indicates local hybridization. The results are discussed within the context of the Pragmatic Species Concept of Seifert (2014). The taxonomic description and a differential diagnosis of Temnothorax crasecundus sp. n. are given.

Highlights

  • The small Formicoxenine ants Temnothorax nylanderi (Förster, 1850) and T. crassispinus (Karavajev, 1926) are dominant elements of the forest floor fauna of European temperate woodland biomes

  • We firstly present our argumentation why T. crasecundus sp. n. has a separate species status and why local hybridization is no argument against heterospecificity

  • (5) Petiole in lateral view rather high and with a weakly concave frontal face; the anterior profiles of node and peduncle form an angle of about 150–155° whereas anterior and dorsal profiles of node form an angle of 90–105°

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Summary

Introduction

The small Formicoxenine ants Temnothorax nylanderi (Förster, 1850) and T. crassispinus (Karavajev, 1926) are dominant elements of the forest floor fauna of European temperate woodland biomes. There is no clear signal provided by pigmentation and overall phenotypic impression Both authors, having a long experience in identification of Temnothorax ants by simple eye inspection, are able to make a fair subjective guess on the species identity in a good number of samples but fail in many others. Both species fully fit the definition of cryptic species by Seifert (2009): “...species which are not safely separable by primary visual or acoustic perception of an expert.

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