Homology (Bi)Weekly: Dentiform Labral Setae

Red Hot Chilli Peppers? No, dentiform setae in the labrum of an Onychomyrmex doddi worker (Scanning Electron Micrograph, Roberto Keller/AMNH)
Just as the anterior margin of an ant’s cranium can sometimes be armed with rows of dentiform clypeal setae (that is, especially modified hairs), the lid that closes the insect’s mouth called labrum can bear identical structures. The image above shows two of these specialized teeth-like pieces (in red) flanking an empty broad socket where a third piece used to be inserted.

The labrum and part of the clypeus of an Onychomyrmex doddi worker. A row of dentiform setae adorn the labrum (in red) and the clypeus (in yellow; Scanning Electron Micrograph, Roberto Keller/AMNH)
Although these dentiform setae vary in size and shape quite considerably from species to species, when they are present in different parts of the body within an individual they show the same morphology, suggesting that they are the result of a similar developmental program that switches on at the different positions.

Head of the African subterranean ant Apomyrma stygia showing the hypertrophied dentiform setae in the labrum (in red; Scanning Electron Micrograph, Roberto Keller/AMNH)
Moreover, there is a interesting similarity between dentiform setae that have developed in similar but apparently independent (non-homologous) conditions. The hugely grown dentiform setae restricted to the labrum in Apomyrma stygia are identical to the similarly hypertrophied ones found in Amblyopone pluto but that occur exclusively in the clypeus (see last image on this post). Though not sisters, these two taxa belong to the same Amblyoponinae clade.
Lastly, a couple of comments regarding a recent paper describing the ant fossil Gerontoformica, which has similar detiform setae in both the clypeus and labrum. Nel and coworkers1 mention that dentiform setae in extant ants are found either in the clypeus or in the labrum but never in combination. This is not the case as can be seen in the example of Onychomyrmex pictured above. There is also the suggestion that Probolomyrmex, a non-amblyoponine genus, has dentiform setae on the labrum. However, close inspection revels that this is also not the case. Rather, most setae covering the body in this genus, including the few stout ones on the labrum surface, are short and scale-like and can easily be confused with pegs at low magnification.
So far, in extant taxa these peculiar dentiform setae arming the clypeus and/or labrum are only known to occur within the subfamily Amblyoponinae.
References
- Nel, A., G. H. Perrault and V. Perrichot. 2004. The oldest ant in the Lower Cretaceous amber of Charente-Maritime (SW France)(Insecta: Hymenoptera: Formicidae). Geologica Acta 2(1): 23-29. (326k PDF file). From antbase.org. ↩