Tracing the roots: clarification on the type locality of Halobates sexualis Distant (Heteroptera: Gerridae)
Author
Samuel, Amos Shem
text
Zootaxa
2020
2020-03-24
4755
2
399
400
journal article
21360
10.11646/zootaxa.4755.2.13
fc4095a8-9333-43fa-a65b-b65ed6c1eed6
1175-5326
3974737
A69D316E-B306-4AD5-A2E4-7B3B26953FD5
The
marine water strider
Halobates sexualis
Distant, 1903
was originally described from the estuary of
Jambu River
(
Distant 1903
). This species has been recorded from
Malaysia
(
Cheng 1985
,
Zettel & Tran 2009
,
Ikawa
et al.
2012
),
Sri Lanka
(
Andersen & Foster 1992
,
Ikawa
et al.
2012
) and
Thailand
(
Román-Palacios
et al.
2018
).
In
the pioneering work by
Herring (1961)
on this genus, he mentioned the
type
locality to be “Estuary of the Jambu River, Malaya.”
Andersen and Foster (1992)
provided notes on the whereabouts of the
type
locality of this species and mentioned that it was probably located in
northern Malaya
(
Kuala Jambu
) immediately south of the border of
Thailand
on the
Gulf
of
Siam
coast.
Andersen and Cheng (2004)
further backed this up by mentioning
Malaysia
in the range of
H. sexualis
,
which was not recorded from
Malaysia
until 2009 (
Zettel & Tran 2009
) but also stated that it was not verified personally. However,
Distant (1903)
mentioned the collection locality as “Estuary of the Jambu River, Jhering.” According to the Map of the Malay Peninsula published around the same time period in 1898 by Stanford, London (
RASGBI 1898
), Jambu or Jering is located along the coast of Yaring (formerly Jhering/Jering) which is a
District Town
in
Pattani Province
of
Thailand
.
This
location is about
120 km
northwest of the previously presumed location by
Andersen & Foster (1992
; see fig. 24) and is most likely the site of collection, which is in present-day
Thailand
.
The
type
locality of this species should thus be attributed to
Thailand
instead of
Malaysia
.
FIGURE 1
. The original type locality of
Halobates sexualis
is indicated with a yellow star and the assumed type locality with a red circle. Inset shows the map published in 1898 (adapted from
RASGBI 1898
).
Further, the original description of
Halobates sexualis
was published in the series “Fasciculi Malayensis: anthropological and zoological results of an expedition to
Perak
and the Siamese Malay States,
1901–1902
”, which additionally reinforces the initial basis for this geographic misinterpretation.
Some
of the past confusion as to whether the
type
locality lay in
Malaysia
or not may have arisen because the far southern provinces of
Thailand
, immediately to the north of the modern Malaysian state of Perak, were for a time referred to by British authorities as the “Siamese Malay States.” This has previously caused some confusion in regard to the
type
locality for another water strider,
Metrocoris nigrofasciatus
, which was taken at Bukit Besar, near Nawngchik, which equates to modern Nong Chik,
Thailand
(
Polhemus 1990
, pp. 22–23). This latter locality lies only
23 km
to the southwest of the town of Jambu shown in the map accompanying the present manuscript, and as with Jambu, was long interpreted to lie in
Malaysia
. In both cases, the specimens were collected during the same expedition by Nelson Annandale and
Herbert C. Robinson. This
former colonial naming convention likely contributed to the confusion as to which Jambu was actually being referred to in the earlier literature.