A taxonomic overview and key to the ants of Barrow Island, Western Australia

This work characterises the ant (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) fauna of Barrow Island, Western Australia, and provides a key to the workers and several unique reproductives of the 117species recorded from the island thus far. In all, 11 of the 13 subfamilies of Western Australian ants have been recorded...

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Main Author: Heterick, Brian E.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Western Australian Museum 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/41436
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author Heterick, Brian E.
author_facet Heterick, Brian E.
author_sort Heterick, Brian E.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description This work characterises the ant (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) fauna of Barrow Island, Western Australia, and provides a key to the workers and several unique reproductives of the 117species recorded from the island thus far. In all, 11 of the 13 subfamilies of Western Australian ants have been recorded from Barrow Island, but Myrmeciinae and Heteroponerinae are absent. At a generic level, the fauna of the island is less rich, holding 36 of the 71 genera currently known from Western Australia. The ant fauna is characteristic of the Eremae a Botanical Province of the Pilbara, rather than that of the Carnarvon Basin from which Barrow Island is geologically derived. Ninety-three ant species (79.5% of the total on Barrow Island) are shared with the ant fauna of the Pilbara region on the adjoining mainland, but only 52 species (44.4% of the total) are shared with the ant fauna of the Carnarvon Basin. The island is very rich in unspecialised and thermophilic ant species. Five such genera, i.e., Iridomyrmex (14 spp.), Monomorium (13 spp.), Polyrhachis (12 spp.), Melophorus (10spp.), and Camponotus (nine spp.) make up almost 50% (i.e., 49.6%) of the island’s ant fauna. Very few ants appear to be endemic to Barrow Island. The relative proportions of the two major subfamilies(Formicinae and Myrmicinae, together comprising 61.5% of the total ant richness) are similar to the proportions found in the South-west Botanical Division for these two subfamilies (i.e., 65.9%), with Barrow Island having a slightly lower ratio of formicines to myrmicines than is found in the south-west of the state. An estimate of the total number of ant species likely to occur on Barrow Island, using the Estimate-S program (Colwell 2009), suggests that a maximum of fourteen additional species may be as yet unrecorded.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-414362017-10-18T06:05:13Z A taxonomic overview and key to the ants of Barrow Island, Western Australia Heterick, Brian E. ant fauna Chevron Australia taxonomic key Barrow Island This work characterises the ant (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) fauna of Barrow Island, Western Australia, and provides a key to the workers and several unique reproductives of the 117species recorded from the island thus far. In all, 11 of the 13 subfamilies of Western Australian ants have been recorded from Barrow Island, but Myrmeciinae and Heteroponerinae are absent. At a generic level, the fauna of the island is less rich, holding 36 of the 71 genera currently known from Western Australia. The ant fauna is characteristic of the Eremae a Botanical Province of the Pilbara, rather than that of the Carnarvon Basin from which Barrow Island is geologically derived. Ninety-three ant species (79.5% of the total on Barrow Island) are shared with the ant fauna of the Pilbara region on the adjoining mainland, but only 52 species (44.4% of the total) are shared with the ant fauna of the Carnarvon Basin. The island is very rich in unspecialised and thermophilic ant species. Five such genera, i.e., Iridomyrmex (14 spp.), Monomorium (13 spp.), Polyrhachis (12 spp.), Melophorus (10spp.), and Camponotus (nine spp.) make up almost 50% (i.e., 49.6%) of the island’s ant fauna. Very few ants appear to be endemic to Barrow Island. The relative proportions of the two major subfamilies(Formicinae and Myrmicinae, together comprising 61.5% of the total ant richness) are similar to the proportions found in the South-west Botanical Division for these two subfamilies (i.e., 65.9%), with Barrow Island having a slightly lower ratio of formicines to myrmicines than is found in the south-west of the state. An estimate of the total number of ant species likely to occur on Barrow Island, using the Estimate-S program (Colwell 2009), suggests that a maximum of fourteen additional species may be as yet unrecorded. 2013 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/41436 Western Australian Museum restricted
spellingShingle ant fauna
Chevron Australia
taxonomic key
Barrow Island
Heterick, Brian E.
A taxonomic overview and key to the ants of Barrow Island, Western Australia
title A taxonomic overview and key to the ants of Barrow Island, Western Australia
title_full A taxonomic overview and key to the ants of Barrow Island, Western Australia
title_fullStr A taxonomic overview and key to the ants of Barrow Island, Western Australia
title_full_unstemmed A taxonomic overview and key to the ants of Barrow Island, Western Australia
title_short A taxonomic overview and key to the ants of Barrow Island, Western Australia
title_sort taxonomic overview and key to the ants of barrow island, western australia
topic ant fauna
Chevron Australia
taxonomic key
Barrow Island
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/41436