Stingless bees (Hymenoptera: Apidae: Meliponini) of the Indian subcontinent: Diversity, taxonomy and current status of knowledge
Author
Rasmussen, Claus
text
Zootaxa
2013
3647
3
401
428
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3647.3.1
8d7ba7be-98bd-4555-b3e7-cd2b018e6bbf
1175-5326
219391
3E2DFCFC-9D75-4245-82F5-9B9FD977160A
Tetragonula ruficornis
(Smith in 1870)
(
Figs 6
a–i, map 2)
Trigona ruficornis
Smith
in Horne & Smith 1870: 185, 194:
Lectotype
(BMNH, worker): examined, “
India
” (typed, with handwritten reverse “69 / 86”), “
SYNTYPE
” (blue border), “
SYNTYPE
[worker symbol] /
Trigona
/
ruficornis
/ F. Smith, 1870: 194 / det. D. Notton, 2012”). In addition “
LECTOTYPE
Trigona ruficornis Smith Design. C. Rasmussen 2013
”;
Type
locality:
INDIA
, Uttar Pradesh, Varanasi (formerly Benares) (on
April 4th, 1863
) [
25.28°N
,
82.96°E
].
Melipona smithii
Bingham 1897: 560
, 563: Unnecessary replacement name for
Trigona ruficornis
Smith
, nec “Lamarck”. Lamarck 1817 (and repeated in 1835) only listed these five stingless bee species in the genus
Melipona
:
M. favosa
,
M. amalthea
,
M. ruficrus
,
M. postica
, and
M. pallida
. The replacement name therefore remains enigmatic as there was no
M. ruficornis
, unless Bingham had it mistaken for
M. ruficrus
Latreille
(not Lamarck, and -crus, Latin, in reference to leg, not -cornis, horned, in reference to the antennae).
Provenance:
Frederick Smith (
1805–1879
) described this species based on several specimens and the report of a single nest collected by Charles Horne (
1824–1872
). Horne had located the nest in Varanasi (formerly Benares), Uttar Pradesh, but Smith cited confusingly and probably incorrectly the
type
locality as Mainpuri, Uttar Pradesh, almost
500 km
NW of Varanasi (many of the other insect species from this publication were in fact collected in Mainpuri and maybe hence the confusion?). The register of the Natural History Museum in London indicates that lot 69 from 1886 included, among others, three specimens of
T. ruficornis
from
India
presented by Horne as part of
type
specimens described earlier. David Notton of the BMNH also located the remains of a nest (BMNH specimen number 650787) labeled as
Trigona
from
India
84/38. Referring to the register, this was part of a lot of
Hymenoptera
from
India
, collected by the late Charles Horne, and donated by his widow but also relating to Horne & Smith (1870) probably representing the nest described in that paper. The nest is apparently mostly batumen and cerumen from the internal parts of the nest, thus, not including diagnostic features such as the nest entrance or brood combs.
FIGURE 6
.
Tetragonula ruficornis
(Smith)
: lectotype of
Trigona ruficornis
.
6A
. Habitus, dorsal view.
6B
. Frontal view of head.
6C
. Habitus, right lateral view.
6D
. Lower frontal view of head, including mandibles.
6E
. Outer view of left hind leg.
6F
. Inner view of left hind leg.
6G
. Right forewing.
6H
. View towards propodeum.
6I
. Labels.
Lectotype
:
Although a single specimen was separated earlier and labeled as the “
holotype
” (specimen BMNH 17b.1187, labeled “
India
” (reverse “69 / 86”), “
Type
” (red border), “
Trigona
/
ruficornis
/ (
Type
) Smith”, “B.M.
TYPE
/ HYM. / 17b.1187”), the account by Smith clearly indicates that the species was described from a nest, and multiple specimens must have been acquired by the museum. Two additional specimens with label data “69 / 86” have been located by D. Notton in the general collection under the name
T. smithii
, and are now considered
syntypes
.
As
already pointed out by Moure (1961), the “
holotype
” is headless and it would therefore not be desirable to select this particular specimen as the
lectotype
. Fortunately, Moure (1961) treating this headless specimen as
holotype
does not qualify as
lectotype
by inference (ICZN 1999, Article 74.6), as the biological account accompanying the original description clearly indicate that there was a
syntype
series (ICZN 1999). Instead, I here designate a complete
syntype
specimen as the
lectotype
in order to stabilize the future use of the name.
Comments:
Moure (1961) suggested the headless specimen should be a callow, but the pigmentation appears to be complete, and all of the lecto- and
paralectotype
specimens are rather light colored compared to other Indian species. Apparently Schwarz (1939) was the first to suggest the synonymy of
T. ruficornis
under
T. iridipennis
, but he later changed his mind and identified bees from
India
as
T. ruficornis
(see Nogueira-Neto 1949, 1951).
Tetragonula bengalensis
(
Cameron
1897)
(
Figs 7
a–i, map 2)
Trigona bengalensis
Cameron
1897: 143
–144:
Lectotype
(
OUMNH, worker): examined, “
Trigona
/
bengalensis
/ Cam.”. In addition “
LECTOTYPE
Trigona bengalensis
Cameron
Design. C Rasmussen 2013
”;
Type
locality:
INDIA
, West Bengal,
26 km
N of Kolkata (formerly Calcutta) on the east bank of the
Hooghly
river (also known as
Hugli
) (sometime during
1872–1886
or 1893) [ca.
22.68°N
,
88.38°E
].
Provenance:
Peter
Cameron
(
1847–1912
) described this species based on at least five specimens collected by George Alexander James Rothney (
1849–1922
). These five specimens are all in agreement with the original description of
T. bengalensis
(only one labeled as such), but one of these individuals, standing over the name “
bengalensis
” in the Rothney drawer in OUMNH, is labeled in different handwriting and on a more recent paper label as
T. iridipennis
.
As
Cameron
did not refer to
T. iridipennis
in his account
Hymenoptera Orientalia
, he must have been unaware of the species proposed by Smith (from
Sri Lanka
) and the label could have been added subsequently by an unknown as a sign of synonymy. However, Rothney (1903) himself later provided an account of the
type
locality stating that
T. bengalensis
was rare compared to
T. iridipennis
.
Lectotype
:
I here designate as the
lectotype
the only specimen from the original Rothney drawer labeled as “
bengalensis
” in order to stabilize the future use of the name. The remaining four specimens standing over the drawer label “
bengalensis Cam.
” are considered conspecific
paralectotypes
. An additional OUMNH drawer label is printed, in red, “BARRACKPORE: / Rothney” in support of these being authentic
type
specimens.
Comments:
Tetragonula bengalensis
was first synonymized under
T. iridipennis
by Bingham (1897) without further discussion. Most later authors followed this, although Sakagami (1978), in an addendum (p. 247), pointed out that males from
Sri Lanka
(
type
locality of
T. iridipennis
) and
India
(
type
locality of
T. bengalensis
) differed in the genitalia, but were otherwise identical. Therefore Sakagami proposed to use
T. iridipennis
for the Sri Lankan population and
T. bengalensis
for the Indian population (ignoring the fact that
T. ruficornis
was an earlier name), although he cautioned that
T. pagdeni
(Schwarz 1939)
from
Thailand
might not differ from the latter.