Chelaner smithii (Forel, 1892)
In this section
-
Ants of New Zealand
- Amblyopone australis
- Austroponera castanea
- Austroponera castaneicolor
- Cardiocondyla minutior
- Chelaner antarcticus
- Chelaner smithii
- Discothyrea antarctica
- Doleromyrma darwiniana
- Fulakora saundersi
- Heteroponera brouni
- Huberia brounii
- Huberia striata
- Hypoponera eduardi
- Hypoponera punctatissima
- Iridomyrmex undescribed
- Linepithema humile
- Mayriella abstinens
- Monomorium antipodum
- Monomorium floricola
- Monomorium pharaonis
- Monomorium sydneyense
- Nylanderia spp
- Ochetellus glaber
- Orectognathus antennatus
- Pheidole megacephala
- Pheidole proxima
- Pheidole rugosula
- Pheidole vigilans
- Ponera leae
- Prolasius advena
- Rhytidoponera chalybaea
- Rhytidoponera metallica
- Strumigenys perplexa
- Strumigenys xenos
- Technomyrmex jocosus
- Tetramorium bicarinatum
- Tetramorium grassii
- References
General Description
Identification
Often confused with C. antarcticus
Antennae of the workers are 10 to 12-segmented (most often 12), usually with a conspicuous club. The front margin of the clypeus has a single central elongate hair. Metanotal groove present, either deeply or feebly impressed. Petiole and, generally, the postpetiole have distinct rounded nodes.
Diagnostic features of the worker
Length 2.3-2.6 mm; antennae 12-segmented; mandibles 5-toothed; metanotal groove feebly impressed (cf. most antarcticus workers); smooth and shiny without spines on the propodeum (cf. Huberia species); colour generally brownish-yellow, including antennae and legs. Workers move slowly even in warm conditions. This feature and their small size enable this species to be distinguished from C. antarcticus in the field. In addition, its colour differentiates it from dark forms of antarcticus.
NB: This species is very poorly represented in collections, probably because most specimens have been lumped with C. antarcticus.
Biology
Little of its biology is known. Its morphological similarity to C. antarcticus would suggest it is probably a generalist. Small colonies have been found nesting under small stones in the open grassland adjacent to native forest (AWD pers. obs.). Workers have been collected from beneath a turf mat of browntop and sweet vernal in open grassland with sparsely spaced hard tussock, Festuca novae-zealandiae, in inland Canterbury (see further details next paragraph).
C. smithii workers were observed carrying off untreated ryegrass seed from a field trial at Broken River, near Porter’s Pass, inland Canterbury (early December, 1972). It was thought that this activity might have been a factor in the poor establishment of the seed in the trial (R.J.M. Hay pers. comm.).
W.W. Smith (1896) found the pseudococcid, Dysmicoccus formicicola (Maskell) [Smith knew it as Ripersia formicola Maskell] associated with C. smithii in Canterbury. He observed the guests being carried off by the workers when the stone covering a nest was raised.
This species is collected occasionally in litter samples (indicating that it also inhabits native forests) and in pitfall traps.