Studies On Myrmecophiles (1908)

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Studies On Myrmecophiles (1908)
William Morton Wheeler
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The latter locality is probably a lapsus calami for British Columbia, since F, ob- scuripes does not occur in the Atlantic States and H, tristriatus is like- wise a western insect. Schwarz (1890) also cites this beetle as occur- ring with F, schaufussi ^\. Helena, Montana. Brues (1903) has figured a specimen taken by Professor H. Heath in a nest of F, subpolita at Pacific Grove, California.
6. H, brunneipennis Rand. — This beetle appears to be confined to the Eastern States and. has been taken
...only in the nests of our com- mon species of Formica. It is cited by Schwarz from nests of F, fusca (evidently var. subsericea) and I have taken it both with this ant in New York State and with F. neocinerea in Illinois (1902). Blanchard and Liebeck (1891) have encountered it in the larger mounds ot F. exsectoides, H. brunneipennis is the only one of our American species whose habits have been briefly noticed, and the only account of these which -I have seen, is the following note published by Liebeck some years ago : ** A recent addition to the collection at the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia is a hill of the mound-building ant, Formica exsectoides^ from the vicinity of Altoona, Pa., containing a living colony of ants, measuring about three feet in diameter at the base and -about two feet high.

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