Cataulacus traegaordhi Santschi
Type
location South Africa (Santschi 1914e: 24, illustrated,
all forms); junior synonyms marleyi (Forel, 1914d: 219,
worker; Arnold, 1917: 399, queen) from South Africa, suddensis
(Weber, 1943c: 378, worker & male) from Sudan and ugandensis
(Santschi, 1914b: 110, worker) from Uganda. Bolton (1982)
lists it, without details, as being known from Ghana, Nigeria
and Cameroun; plus Zaïre and numerous other
sub-Saharan countries; all forms known
.
Revived from synonymy with
Cataulacus
pygmaeus (as in Bolton, 1974a: 48) by Bolton (1982: 359)
but without fresh, full descriptions of either species. Thus, some
of the information below may refer to pygmaeus.
Santschi's (1914e) description is at
.
Santschi's (1914b) description of ugandensis is at
.
Arnold (1917: 399) gave a translation, this is at
.
Forel's (1914d) description of marleyi is at
.
Arnold (1917: 398) gave a translation of marleyi, with a
description of the queen, this is at
.
Weber's (1943c) description of suddensis (as pygmaeus
ssp suddensis) is at
.
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The
photomontage is of a specimen from Sudan, from Thal Jath,
South Sudan Province, collector Awatif Omer, 2006, Sudan 12. This
appears close to the original Santschi description and drawing.
Other images can be seen in the folder at -
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Nigeria specimens (as Cataulacus pygmaeus, Taylor,
1979: 13). WORKER. TL 3.70-4.40 mm, HL 0.94-1.10, HW 0.92-1.06, SL
0.48-0.52, PW 0.72-0.90
Occipital corners denticulate, with an adjacent second denticle.
Sides of head behind eyes denticulate. Sculpturation of head and
dorsal altitrunk a rugoreticulum, coarser on the alitrunk, tending
posteriorly to a fine irregular widely spaced rugation. Simple
erect hairs on all dorsal surfaces. Sides of alitrunk marginate
especially strong on the pronotum and denticulate throughout.
Propodeal spines broad, dorsoventrally flattened. Subpetiolar
process variable sometimes with the posteroventral angle acute,
subpostpetiolar process short and simple.
My collections were the first positive identifications from Nigeria
(at the Cocoa Research Institute of Nigeria, Idi Ayunre, edge of
Block W22, on a flower head). Although Eguagie (1971) reported it,
from Araromi near Ibadan, the specimens were not in the CRIN
collection nor seem to have been seen by Bolton (1974a); possibly
they were those listed under lujae in the later paper by
Bolton (1982). |
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This
appears, as with the specimen below, to be a match for the
Santschi (1935b) description of ugandensis, with the
broader head and finer sculpturation on the face; the shorter more
convex alitrunk; and, being generally shiner. |
In
the earlier blanket consideration, Bolton (1974a) described pygmaeus
as mainly found in savannah and open wooded areas, but also from
forests. My findings of traegaordhi were from low
vegetation in unshaded areas at CRIN. It nests in stems or twigs
and will tend small coccids. I suspect that in West Africa this is
a species of open areas within forests and pygmaeus is
from tree savannah areas. The distribution outside West Africa,
however, suggests that the taxonomic situation is not fully
resolved. In the earlier list, under pygmaeus, there were
findings from Liberia, at Harbel (W.M. Mann); and Ivory
Coast, near Abidjan (W.L. Brown) but these records seem to
have been lost in the 1982 paper.
The records from Mt. Nimba, Guinea, given by Bernard
(1952) as traegaordhi, came from both forest and savanna
locations. Workers were abundant in savanna (Kéoulenta and
Ziéla) but also from forest at N'Zo and Ravine 3 of Mount Tô
(Camp II, 1500 m). Bernard commented on the discontinuous
geographical distribution of the (single) species, being common in
Natal, Uganda and Congo (Belgian, more rare) with the suprising
banality at Nimba (numerous workers, three queens and one male,
collected by Lamotte). The most common habitat was under bark and
in twigs, as had been found for the type collected by Traegaordh
in Natal at around 2000 m (after Bernard , 1952). The savanna
records may well have been of
Cataulacus
pygmaeus.
Taking the surmise of traegaordhi as a forest species,
it was collected by Room (1971) from on cocoa trees, plus on the
ground around the nest trees at the Mamfe-Mampong cocoa farm in
Ghana. His report includes reference to it nesting in
cocoa canopy. It also occurred in 63 of his 168 canopy samples at
other farms and he describes it as a highly specialized species
distributed at apparent random in relation to any of the dominant
ants. In his studies of the fauna of cocoa mistletoe (Room, 1972a,
1975), it was the second most frequent insect on mistletoe plants,
on the basis of presence/absence, ranked 8th in occurrence at the
cocoa/mistletoe junction (78 of 630 samples), but was only 20th in
terms of abundance (185 individuals). Curiously Bolton's (1974a)
summary is at odds with Room's information. Other Ghana records
are from Accra (O.W. Richards), Larteh (D. Leston), Pokoase and
Koforidua (N.L.H. Krauss) (Bolton, 1974a).
The photomontage is of a specimen, appearing to match the ugandensis
form, from Gabon, Pongara National Park, 1-8.viii.2006;
sweep net in sesame & forest; collected by Yves Braet. Other
images can be seen in the folder at -
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The
photomontage is derived from that shown on
http://sifolinia.blogspot.com/2007/10/cataulacus-traegaordhi.html,
taken by Mike Lush, Gambia, 3.iv.2007. |
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