Scaptotrigona postica (Latreille, 1809)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1590/1806-9665-RBENT-2023-0060 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03EF87B8-0545-FFD0-FFE0-FEB7FDAFFA09 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Scaptotrigona postica (Latreille, 1809) |
status |
|
Scaptotrigona postica (Latreille, 1809) View in CoL
Melipona postica Illiger, 1806: 157 . Nomen nudum.
Melipona postica Klug, 1807a: 219 . Nomen nudum.
Melipona postica Klug, 1808: 58 . Lectotype worker, presently designated, Brazil: Bahia ( ZMB). Nomen oblitum.
Melipona postica Latreille, 1809a: 337 . Lectotype worker, presently designated, Brazil: Bahia ( ZMB). Nomen protectum.
Scaptotrigona postica xanthotricha Moure, 1950: 78 View in CoL . Holotype worker, Brazil: São Paulo, Amparo ( DZUP). New synonym.
Historical account
The name Melipona postica was first introduced by Illiger (1806) as a nomen nudum, in his review of Kirby’s work on bees. In this work, Illiger proposed the genus Melipona to segregate the stingless bees from the genus Apis proper. The name was listed together with many additional names, which were mostly nomina nuda based mainly on material received from Brazil. The name was subsequently listed by Klug (1807a, p. 219) and mentioned by Klug (1807b, p. 265) in the description of his Melipona testacea, in both cases as nomina nuda.
Klug (1808) can be considered the first author to have validly introduced the name according to the current rules of nomenclature. In his article dealing with sexual differences in Hymenoptera, Klug pointed out that “ Melipona Illig. , in which it also has females with yellow antennae and face, as M. postica Illig. and with spotted face, as M. favosa.” [in the original: “ MELIPONA Illig. , bei welcher es auch Weibchen mit gelbem Fühlerschaft und Gesichte, wie die M. postica Illig. und mit geflecktem Gesichte, wie die M. favosa, giebt.” ( Klug, 1808, p. 58)]. The two characters provided for Melipona postica can be considered a description and would suffice to validly characterize the taxon. Klug himself attributed the name to Illiger, both in his paper and in specimen labels (see Fig. 3G View Figure 3 ). However, the name has been consistently associated with Latreille, who provided a formal description of the species in his 1809 work (see below). Here, Latreille’s name is considered nomem protectum, while Klug’s name is treated as nomem oblitum, an action taken in accordance with Article 23.9.1 of the Code (ICZN, 1999). Conditions required by Article 23.9.1.2 are met and can be verified by the numerous references given by Camargo and Pedro (2007, p. 484) under Scaptotrigona postica . Also, to the best of my knowledge, the condition in Article 23.9.1.1 also applies.
Latreille’s work containing the description of Melipona postica was included in the livraisons 5 and 6 of volume 1 of Humboldt & Bompland’s Recueil d’Observations de Zoologie et d’Anatomie Comparée. According to Sherborn (1899), these livraisons were distributed in 1809. The date of 1811 given by Camargo and Pedro (2007) refers to a reprint of the first volume, which also according to Sherborn (1899), appeared in 1812 and not in 1811 as given in the printed work. Also, Camargo and Pedro (2007, p. 484) attributed the name Melipona postica as first appearing in Latreille’s (1807) 3 rd volume of the Genera Crustaceorum et Insectorum. In reality, Latreille dealt with bees in his 4 th volume, published in 1809 ( Latreille, 1809b, p. 183), and not in the 3 rd volume. However, in the 4 th volume the name postica appears in a list of names attributed to Melipona , without any description, being therefore also a nomen nudum.
The specimens upon which Illiger proposed the name Melipona postica were collected by Francisco Agostinho Gomes in Brazil and sent to Johann Centurius Graf von Hoffmansegg, in Prussia ( Gomes, 1800 -1807) (see Pont, 1995, p.139 for the spelling of Hoffmansegg’s name). Gomes was born in 1769 in Salvador, Bahia, and at an early age was sent to Portugal to be trained as a priest. With the sudden death of his father, he was called back to Brazil to assume the family business without completing his training. Little is known about Gomes in the years following his return to Brazil, but his name has been implicated in the sedition of 1798 in Salvador ( Pedreira, 1977; Tavares, 2003). He was denounced to the Portuguese Crown on October 4th, 1798, and by January 1799, with the closure of the inquiries, he was considered innocent and embarked in the following month to Lisbon ( Pedreira, 1977).
Soon after his arrival, Gomes got acquainted with Hoffmansegg, who was in Lisbon at the same time, on his second trip to Portugal ( Stresemann 1950a, b). Hoffmansegg had arrived there one year earlier, in March 1798. During their overlap in Lisbon, Hoffmansegg made arrangements to receive material from Brazil through Gomes and gave him instructions on how to collect natural history specimens, especially birds and insects. By the end of 1799, Gomes dispatched his library, containing over 350 books, from Lisbon to Salvador ( Neves and Neves, 2004), and according to Stresemann (1950a, b), he left Portugal to Brazil in April 1800. His first letter to Hoffmansegg, dating from May 16 th, 1800, and sent from Salvador, started with the sentence “I arrived here fortunately after forty-one days of travel” [in the original: “J’ai arrivé ici heureusement apres quarante et un jours de voyage”].In the first years of the 1800s, Gomes sent a number of shipments containing natural history specimens, receiving mainly books in return from Hoffmansegg ( Gomes, 1800 -1807). In addition to a large number of insects, he sent bird and mammal skins, preserved fishes, other invertebrates, and plant exsiccates. Part of Gomes’ specimens became type material of iconic mammal species, such as the bristle-spined rat,Chaetomys subspinosus (Olfers) (see details in Voss and Angermann, 1997).
Gomes obtained most of the specimens sent to Hoffmansegg in Salvador, Bahia, and its surroundings, indicating that Salvador should be considered the type locality for most taxa whose descriptions were based on Gomes’ specimens. The material received from Gomes was kept by Hoffmansegg in Braunschweig, together with Hellwig’s collection, and was studied first by him and Illiger, who lived in Hellwig’s house then ( Stresemann, 1950a, b). Klug also started to publish new taxa based on material from Hoffmansegg’s collection, but it is not clear how he had access to them since he lived in Berlin. Some specimens might have been taken from Braunschweig to Berlin by Hoffmansegg himself, who made them available to Klug. This seems to be the case involving Oxaea flavescens Klug, since Illiger and Klug were not aware of each other studies (see Klug, 1807c, 1810; details of this case will be presented in a forthcoming contribution). By the early 1820s, with the acquisition of Hoffmansegg’s insect collection, the specimens were incorporated in the Zoological Museum of the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität zu Berlin, founded in 1810 ( Klug, 1824).
Among the documents preserved in the Museum für Naturkunde (Historische Bild- und Schriftgutsammlungen), there are manuscript lists compiled by Illiger (or perhaps Hoffmansegg) of taxon names based on the specimens received from shipments sent by Gomes. In a list referring to the shipment from 1801, the name “ Apis postica N.” already shows up ( Fig. 1 View Figure 1 ), pointing out that material from this stingless bee was received in the first shipment.
Over the years, material from the Zoological Museum in Berlin, including those received from Gomes, were exchanged with other entomologists by Klug. This explains why specimens of what is here considered part of the type series of Melipona postica ended up in Winthem’s collection, which, after his death, was acquired by the NMW in 1852 (see Pont, 1986, p. 206;1995, p. 148). Winthem’s name is listed by Klug (1824, p. xii) among those with whom he had exchanged specimens. Winthem’s letters to Klug, preserved in ZMB’s Historische Bild- und Schriftgutsammlungen, span from September 28 th, 1819 to April 23 rd, 1841.
Two workers were also sent to Spinola in Italy, and they are still preserved in his collection in Turin (see below). Spinola (1840) lists them on page 124 as “ Melipona postica Latr. 2 individus du Brésil ” and states on page 134 that he received a large number of stingless bee specimens from Klug in 1837. Spinola’s letters to Klug, preserved in ZMB’s Historische Bild- und Schriftgutsammlungen, span from March 13 th, 1808 to January 5 th, 1845.
Type specimens
A single worker, assumed here to belong to the original type series, has survived in the ZMB collection. It fits Latreille’s description perfectly and, except for lacking the head and the left hind leg apically to the coxa, the specimen is in good condition ( Fig. 2 View Figure 2 ). Also , in addition to the pin hole, it has an extra hole on the right ventral side of its mesepisternum, whose diameter is smaller than that of the current pin, suggesting that the original pin was likely replaced. When located in the collection, it bore the labels “386”, “Mus.\ Berol.” and “Postica \ N.\ Latr. (Humb.).\ Bahia. Gom.” ( Fig.2F View Figure 2 ), with the last label folded in the pin. The first label refers to the accession number in the “Generalkatalog Hymenoptera ”; the corresponding entry in the catalog repeats the same information found in the 3 rd label and also indicates that five specimens were found in the collection at the time it was compiled (at some time by the end of the 19 th century). There is a pencil note following the entry pointing to the fact that two specimens were missing. The presence of five specimens is also indicated under the name Melipona postica in the old “Generalkatalog Hymenoptera ”, prepared in 1853 .
Latreille (1809a, p. 337) does not mention the number of specimens he had when preparing the description.He wrote simply “This species is found in Brazil, and it was sent to me by Mr. Illiger ” [in the original: “Cette espèce se trouve au Brésil, et m’a été envoyée par M. Illiger. ”]. Since Latreille does not specify the number of specimens and states that he received the material from Illiger, we can assume that the specimens remaining in Hoffmansegg’s collection can be considered part of the type series. Article 72.4.1.1 of the Code ( ICZN, 1999) states “For a nominal species or subspecies established before 2000, any evidence, published or unpublished, may be taken into account to determine what specimens constitute the type series”. Therefore, the worker present in the ZMB collection is here designated as lectotype and has been labeled as such ( Fig. 2F View Figure 2 ) .
In the NMW collection there is a worker from Winthem’s collection, bearing a label in Klug’s handwriting, that can be considered as belonging to the type series as well ( Fig.3 View Figure 3 ). It bears the labels: “Wthm.” (printed), “postica \ Ill\ Bahia ” (manuscript in black ink in an old paper; Klug’s handwriting) and “T. dorsalis\ det. Friese” (1 st line manuscript in black ink, 2 nd line printed; handwriting and label format do not correspond to those of Friese and indicates that the labels were added by someone else). The specimen is in good condition, missing only the right foreleg and 5 th tarsomere of the right hindleg. Considering the relatively large hole on its mesoscutum and presence of glue holding the specimen to the pin ventrally, we can infer that the original pin was replaced. It has a combination of lower face, scutellum and hind tibiae testaceous, with metapostnotum and propodeum mostly testaceous. Although it differs from the lectotype in minor details of the integument coloration, I believe it belongs to the type series. It received a label of paralectotype ( Fig. 3G View Figure 3 ).
There are eight additional workers from Winthem’s collection in the NMW that might also belong to the original series. They bear the labels “Wthm.” (printed), and “T. dorsalis\ det. Friese ” (as in the paralectotype; see details above). They are structurally identical to the paralectotype (and to the lectotype, for that matter), differing only in minor details of integument coloration. Compared to these other specimens, the paralectotype is the only one exhibiting the combination of testaceous lower face, scutellum, and hind tibiae, with the metapostnotum and propodeum predominantly testaceous and with little pilosity on T2. The other eight workers are slightly darker than the paralectotype, having at least one brown spot on the hind tibiae and darker metapostnotum and propodeum. The color of the scutellum and of the lower face, as well as the pilosity on the T2, vary in these specimens. I believe that this variation corresponds to what I have observed among the material from the Atlantic Forest of southern Bahia and that can be considered normal for this form .
Redescription
Lectotype worker ( Fig. 2 View Figure 2 ). Measurements (in mm): forewing length, 5.7; intertegular distance, 2.0; width of 2 nd metasomal tergum, 2.65. Pronotum, mid and hind legs testaceous.Mesepisternum, scutellum and lateral surface of propodeum varying from brown to reddish brown; metanotum reddish brown; mesoscutum, axilla, metaposnotum and posterior surface of propodeum dark brown to black. Tegula, forewing veins, and pterostigma testaceous; wing membrane light yellow infumated, and becoming brown infumated in the wing apex. Terga laterally reddish brown; remainder of 1 st tergum and most of 2 nd tergum brown, marginal zone of 2 nd tergum testaceous; sterna dark reddish brown. Setae on fore, mid, and most of hind legs reddish testaceous; hind tibia also with many long, dark brown to black setae on its outer surface; penicillum brown. Erect setae on anterior and lateral borders of mesoscutum brown with reddish apex; those on pronotal lobe, mesepisternum and scutellum reddish brown. Dorsal surface of 1 st tergum with only short reddish setae, except for a few longer erect setae laterally; 2 nd tergum with short setae anteriorly and progressively longer setae towards its central and lateral portions, posterior margin of the tergum with a fringe of plumose setae; exposed surface of terga 3-5 entirely covered with dense indument of decumbent plumose pale yellow hairs; erect tergal setae mostly brown basally and with a reddish apex, intermingled with a few entirely yellow ones; 6 th tergum with a few plumose hairs, most of its surface not covered by indument, long erect setae yellow on tergum apex and reddish on disc and laterally; curled setae on sterna entirely pale yellow.Setae along anterior margin of mesoscutum, in particular those placed more laterally, measuring 0.20-0.24 mm; those on posterior margin of scutellum with 0.28-0.34 mm in length; erect setae on central portion of T3 measuring 0.16-0.20 mm, those on T4 and T5 becoming slightly longer; longest setae on lateral portions of T6 with 0.36-0.40 mm in length.
Species identity
Although the type material of Melipona postica has not been reexamined by modern authors, the name has been consistently applied to stingless bee species that Moure (1942) segregated under the genus-group name Scaptotrigona . Despite choosing Latreille’s taxon as the type species of his Scaptotrigona, Moure did not know to which species the name should be applied. The few specimens placed under S. postica in his working collection in the DZUP have Moure’s handwritten labels, indicating that he did not consider them as true “postica ”, suggesting that he changed his interpretation over the years. He has seen in Turin the two workers sent by Klug to Spinola (see above), and wrote only a brief note about them: “postica 2 specimens from Brazil = my ochrotricha with the lower half of the face, scutellum, etc. yellow, the tergites 3-5 densely yellow tomentose and the erect setae yellow” (translated from original manuscript notes in Portuguese; May 5, 1958). It seems likely that Moure did not realize that these two workers could be part of the type series of Melipona postica and probably gave no importance to them. Mention of “my ochrotricha ” refers to S. xanthotricha , as can be deduced from what Moure wrote in his article containing the description of this latter taxon (seeMoure, 1950, p. 76). The specimens in the NMW collection (see above) might have been examined by Moure, who visited there between May 29 th and June 10 th, 1958, although no entry on them was found in his notes.
It is possible that Friese examined specimens from the ZMB collection, although this cannot be known for sure. He described only two species now placed in Scaptotrigona and did not refer to Latreille’s species in his papers. The material from Vienna was seen by Friese ( Fig. 3 View Figure 3 ), who misinterpreted it as Smith’s Trigona dorsalis, a species now placed in the genus Tetragona Lepeletier & Serville. Indeed, Ihering (1903, p. 211) used the name Trigona dorsalis for what has been interpreted as Scaptotrigona xanthotricha , probably based on Friese’s identification of his material.
Moure’s Scaptotrigona xanthotricha is placed here as a synonym under S. postica . He conceived his taxon under a broad scope, including material from Bahia to Paraná in the type series, although he pointed out that some specimens from Bahia had a darker coloration, with only the tip of the scutellum testaceous ( Moure 1950, p. 78). The holotype of S. xanthotricha is identical to the lectotype of Melipona postica in structure and color of the integument and pilosity, differing only in
G.A.R. Melo / Revista Brasileira de Entomologia 67(4):e20230060, 2023 7-8 the lighter color of the scutellum and of the metasomal tergal bristles ( Fig. 4 View Figure 4 ). It also closely agrees with the paralectotype deposited in the NMW collection in features of the head, except for having a dark outline along the epistomal suture.
With the synonymy proposed here and maintaining Moure’s interpretation, S. postica is recognized as a species restricted to the Atlantic Forest along eastern Brazil, from Salvador, Bahia, in the north, to Paraná’s coast, in the south ( Fig. 5 View Figure 5 ). In Minas Gerais its distribution extends further inland following the basins of the Doce and Paraíba do Sul rivers. Workers from southern São Paulo and Paraná are considerably darker and might represent a separate species.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
Kingdom |
|
Phylum |
|
Class |
|
Order |
|
Family |
|
Genus |
Scaptotrigona postica (Latreille, 1809)
Melo, Gabriel A. R. 2023 |
Scaptotrigona postica xanthotricha
Moure, J. S. 1950: 78 |
Melipona postica
Latreille, P. A. 1809: 337 |
Melipona postica
Klug, F. 1808: 58 |
Melipona postica
Klug, F. 1807: 219 |
Melipona postica
Illiger, K. 1806: 157 |