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      Taxonomic revision of Stigmatomma Roger (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) in the Malagasy region

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          Abstract

          Abstract

          In this study we present the first taxonomic revision of the ant genus Stigmatomma in the Malagasy biogeographic region, re­describe the previously known S. besucheti Baroni-Urbani, and describe seven new species to science ( S. bolabola sp. n., S. irayhady sp. n., S. janovitsika sp. n., S. liebe sp. n., S. roahady sp. n., S. sakalava sp. n., and S. tsyhady sp. n.). The revision is based on the worker caste, but we provide brief descriptions of gynes and males for some species. Species descriptions, diagnosis, character discussion, identification key, and glossary are illustrated with 360 high-quality montage and SEM images. The distribution of Stigmatomma species in Madagascar are mapped and discussed within the context of the island’s biomes and ecoregions. We also discuss how some morphometric variables describe the differences among the species in the bioregion. Open science is supported by providing access to R scripts, raw measurement data, and all specimen data used. All specimens used in this study were given unique identifies, and holotypes were imaged. Specimens and images are made accessible on AntWeb.org.

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          Evaluating alternative hypotheses for the early evolution and diversification of ants.

          Ants are the world's most diverse and ecologically dominant eusocial organisms. Resolving the phylogeny and timescale for major ant lineages is vital to understanding how they achieved this success. Morphological, molecular, and paleontological studies, however, have presented conflicting views on early ant evolution. To address these issues, we generated the largest ant molecular phylogenetic data set published to date, containing approximately 6 kb of DNA sequence from 162 species representing all 20 ant subfamilies and 10 aculeate outgroup families. When these data were analyzed with and without outgroups, which are all distantly related to ants and hence long-branched, we obtained conflicting ingroup topologies for some early ant lineages. This result casts strong doubt on the existence of a poneroid clade as currently defined. We compare alternate attachments of the outgroups to the ingroup tree by using likelihood tests, and find that several alternative rootings cannot be rejected by the data. These alternatives imply fundamentally different scenarios for the early evolution of ant morphology and behavior. Our data strongly support several notable relationships within the more derived formicoid ants, including placement of the enigmatic subfamily Aenictogitoninae as sister to Dorylus army ants. We use the molecular data to estimate divergence times, employing a strategy distinct from previous work by incorporating the extensive fossil record of other aculeate Hymenoptera as well as that of ants. Our age estimates for the most recent common ancestor of extant ants range from approximately 115 to 135 million years ago, indicating that a Jurassic origin is highly unlikely.
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            Numerical Ecology

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              Multivariate statistical metods: a primer

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                URI :
                URI :
                Journal
                Biodivers Data J
                Biodivers Data J
                Biodiversity Data Journal
                Biodiversity Data Journal
                Biodiversity Data Journal
                Pensoft Publishers
                1314-2828
                2016
                13 June 2016
                : 4
                : e8032
                Affiliations
                []California Academy of Sciences, San Francisco, United States of America
                Author notes
                Corresponding author: Flavia A. Esteves ( flaviaesteves@ 123456gmail.com ).

                Academic editor: Marek Borowiec

                Article
                Biodiversity Data Journal 2810
                10.3897/BDJ.4.e8032
                4934140
                27433124
                dae2e395-2089-4ff4-9b2e-16392f3323ac
                Flavia A. Esteves, Brian L. Fisher

                This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0 (CC-BY), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

                History
                : 04 February 2016
                : 01 June 2016
                Page count
                Figures: 129, Tables: 3, References: 111
                Funding
                Funded by: Fieldwork was partially supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. DEB-0072713, DEB-0344731, and DEB-0842395. FAE was supported by California Academy of Sciences Postdoctoral Fellowship.
                Categories
                Taxonomic Paper
                Animalia
                Hexapoda
                Insecta
                Arthropoda
                Formicidae
                Hymenoptera
                Invertebrata
                Taxonomy
                Identification Key(s)
                Faunistics & Distribution
                Indian Ocean Islands

                malagasy bioregion,taxonomy,ants, amblyoponinae ,madagascar,seychelles

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