Formicidae of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands (Indian Ocean: Bay of Bengal) Author(S): Prashanth Mohanraj, Musthak Ali and K

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Formicidae of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands (Indian Ocean: Bay of Bengal) Author(S): Prashanth Mohanraj, Musthak Ali and K Formicidae of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands (Indian Ocean: Bay of Bengal) Author(s): Prashanth Mohanraj, Musthak Ali and K. Veenakumari Source: Journal of Insect Science, 10(172):1-11. 2010. Published By: Entomological Society of America DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1673/031.010.14132 URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/full/10.1673/031.010.14132 BioOne (www.bioone.org) is a nonprofit, online aggregation of core research in the biological, ecological, and environmental sciences. BioOne provides a sustainable online platform for over 170 journals and books published by nonprofit societies, associations, museums, institutions, and presses. Your use of this PDF, the BioOne Web site, and all posted and associated content indicates your acceptance of BioOne’s Terms of Use, available at www.bioone.org/page/terms_of_use. Usage of BioOne content is strictly limited to personal, educational, and non-commercial use. Commercial inquiries or rights and permissions requests should be directed to the individual publisher as copyright holder. BioOne sees sustainable scholarly publishing as an inherently collaborative enterprise connecting authors, nonprofit publishers, academic institutions, research libraries, and research funders in the common goal of maximizing access to critical research. Journal of Insect Science: Vol. 10 | Article 172 Mohanraj et al. Formicidae of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands (Indian Ocean: Bay Of Bengal) Prashanth Mohanraj1,3a*, Musthak Ali2b and K. Veenakumari1c 1Central Agricultural Research Institute, P.B. No. 181. Port Blair 744 101, Andamans, India 2Department of Entomology, University of Agricultural Sciences, GKVK, Bangalore-560065, India 3Present address: Project Directorate of Biological Control, P.B. No.2491, Hebbal, Bangalore-560024, India Abstract Ants on the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, India were surveyed. These collections doubled the number of ant species recorded from these islands (from 59 to 125). Records include five endemic species, but no endemic genera. The surveys were fairly superficial, and it is likely many species remain to be discovered on these islands. Keywords: Ants, Andamans, Nicobars Correspondence: a* [email protected], b [email protected], c [email protected], *Corresponding author Received: 16 December 2008, Accepted: 15 January 2010 Copyright : This is an open access paper. We use the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 license that permits unrestricted use, provided that the paper is properly attributed. ISSN: 1536-2442 | Vol. 10, Number 172 Cite this paper as: Mohanraj P, Ali M, Veenakumari K. 2010. Formicidae of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands (Indian Ocean: Bay Of Bengal). Journal of Insect Science 10:172 available online: insectscience.org/10.172 Journal of Insect Science | www.insectscience.org 1 Journal of Insect Science: Vol. 10 | Article 172 Mohanraj et al. Introduction Survey of India that was collected between February and April 1964, reported 15 species It has been 3 decades since McVean (1976) of ants, of which 10 were new records. Tiwari evaluated the status of zoological studies on and Jonathan (1986a, 1986b) described two the Andaman and Nicobar islands (India) and new species, one each from South Andaman observed that many insect species needed to and Great Nicobar. These species belong to be studied as they have been "hitherto genera that were not known previously from neglected [in studies on] the natural history of these islands. In his revisionary studies, these islands". Along with a number of other Bolton (1987) added one more species to the insect groups, the Formicidae have continued ant fauna of these islands. In short, a total of to remain largely neglected, even after this 59 Formicidae species (of which, four were observation was made. The only papers on the identified to the generic level only) were Formicidae of these islands during this period recorded from these islands between 1865 and were by Chhotani and Maiti (1977) and 1987. No papers on the ants of these islands Tiwari and Jonathan (1986a,b). Together these have appeared since then. reports added a mere 11 species to the ant fauna already known from these islands, of The Island Setting which nine were new records and two were new species. Area The Andaman - Nicobar chain of islands Mayr (1865) was perhaps the first to describe situated between 6° 45' - 13° 30' N and 92° - Formicidae from these islands, mainly from 94° E in the Bay of Bengal, Indian Ocean the Nicobars, based on collections made by (Figure 1A, B) consists of 572 islands, islets the Austrian frigate Novara. Years later Forel and rocks (Anonymous 1986). The Andaman (1903) listed a total of 39 species of ants, islands (6408 km2), which are more than three which included species from Mayr (1865), as times larger than the Nicobars (1841 km2), are well as the descriptions of three new species. separated from the latter by the 150-km-wide The new descriptions included two species Ten Degree Channel. In turn, each island from the Andamans and one from the group is fragmented by straits and channels of Nicobars. In the same year, Bingham (1903), varying widths and depths. while dealing with the ants of the Indian subcontinent in the Fauna of British India Tectonics and sea level changes series, mentioned a mere two species from the These are true oceanic islands lying along the Nicobars and none from the Andamans. 6000 km long Sunda Arc, which extends west Emery (1911, 1912, 1921, 1922) made some from the island of Sumatra to Burma in the references to ants from these islands. The north and marks the zone where the Indian- collection of Dr. N. Annandale, made during Australian plate is being subducted beneath November and December 1923 from Mount the Eurasian plate (Moore et al. 1980; Curray Harriet (S. Andaman), was described by 1989). Subduction, which is presumed to have Mukherji and Ribeiro (1925). This included commenced about 130 MYBP following the 15 species, of which two were recorded at the breakup of Gondwanaland in the early generic level only. Chhotani and Maiti (1977), Cretaceous, resulting in the formation of working on another collection, the Zoological oceanic ridges that were uplifted to their Journal of Insect Science | www.insectscience.org 2 Journal of Insect Science: Vol. 10 | Article 172 Mohanraj et al. Figure 1. (A) Location of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands in the Bay of Bengal, Indian Ocean. (B). Andaman and Nicobar Islands showing the islands from where ants were collected (Maps not drawn to scale). High quality figures are available online. Journal of Insect Science | www.insectscience.org 3 Journal of Insect Science: Vol. 10 | Article 172 Mohanraj et al. current elevation as two arcs in the late and 30° C with maximum temperatures of Eocene or early Oligocene times (Curray et al. about 34° C attained in April. High humidity 1979). The outer arc ridge emerges prevails throughout the year, ranging from intermittently above sea level as the more than 60 to about 90 percent. Andaman-Nicobar islands, while the Barren and Narcondam islands are the emergent Vegetation peaks of the submarine ridge that forms the The islands are densely wooded from the inner volcanic arc (Hamilton 1979). water's edge to the tops of the hills, except in those areas initially cleared by the European It is thought that in the Pleistocene, when sea colonial powers and later by settlers from the levels were lower, there was no dry land Indian mainland. Native vegetation has been connecting the islands to any of the adjacent replaced to varying degrees by settlements land masses (Ripley and Beehler 1989). There and introduced plants (intentionally for is also no evidence for the existence of an cultivation and accidentally as weeds) on all earlier land bridge, even during Tertiary times of the 38 inhabited islands. Over the years, (Nassig et al. 1996). During times of sea level this has led to near extinction of the Andaman lowering, however, the sea separating the Giant Evergreen forests, one of the seven Andaman islands from Burma was much major forest types characterized by Champion narrower and shallower than that separating and Seth (1968) as occurring on these islands. the southern Nicobars from Sumatra or the Malay Peninsula (Ripley and Beehler 1989). Materials and Methods Topography Ants were collected from cultivated and The surface of the majority of the islands is uncultivated sites, both from the ground and irregular and hilly, with many narrow valleys. the vegetation. No special methods were used. The hills, which follow the general direction Ants were located visually while walking of the islands, are oriented in the north-south randomly, and they were collected in alcohol direction, and from which arise numerous tubes using a camel hair brush/forceps. T spurs and ridges that branch out in all wigs were broken to collect nesting arboreal directions. The hills on the east are higher ants. than those on the west, with Saddle Peak (732 m) in North Andaman being the highest point Collection localities in the Andamans and Mount Thuillier (642 m) Ants were collected from 14 islands in the in Great Nicobar is the highest in the Nicobars Andamans and three in the Nicobars (Table 1) (Anonymous 1994). at various times between 1989 and 1998. It was, however, on the island of South Climate Andaman that over 80% of the time was spent The islands experience a tropical maritime collecting ants. Only 13% of the time was climate that is strongly influenced by the spent in the Nicobars, with most of this time Indian Ocean. They receive over 3000 mm of (over 98%) spent on the island of Great rainfall between May and December during Nicobar. The islands from where ants had both the South-West and the North-East been collected earlier but which the authors monsoons. The mean minimum and mean were unable to visit were South Brother and maximum temperatures vary between 23° C North Reef in the Andamans and Pulo Milu in Journal of Insect Science | www.insectscience.org 4 Journal of Insect Science: Vol.
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