Pyramica (Serrastruma) simoni (Emery)
Type location South Africa (Strumigenys simoni,
Emery, 1895h: illustrated, worker); junior synonyms biconvexa
(Santschi, 1913b: 258, in key, worker & queen; Santschi,
1914b) from Kenya, boerorum (Santschi, 1913b: 259,
in key, worker) from South Africa, cliens from
Zaïre (Lumbumbashi [Elizabethville], by Bequaert,
1912, in Forel, 1913d: 317, worker), cognata (Santschi,
1911c: 362, worker & queen; Santschi, 1913b: 258, queen) from
Angola, escherichi (Forel, 1910c: 261, worker)
from Eritrea (Ethiopia in Bolton, 1983), fusciventris
from Nigeria (simple name change from obscuriventris
- unavailable & preoccupied name - Santschi, 1914d: 376,
worker, Santschi, 1915c: 261; Emery, 1922f: 324, worker), limbata
(Forel, 1913j: 222, worker) from Zimbabwe and raymondi
(Donisthorpe, 1946c: 778, worker & queen) from Mauritius
(see Bolton, 1995) .
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Emery's
(1895h) description is at
.
Arnold (1917: 380) gave a translation, this is at
.
Forel's (1910c) description of escherichi is at
.
Santschi's (1911c) description of cognata is at
.
Forel's (1913b) description of cliens is at
.
Santschi's (1914b) description of biconvexa is at
.
Santschi's (1914d) description of obscuriventris is at
.
Santschi's (1914e) illustrated description of cognata boerorum
is at .
Arnold (1917: 381) gave an illustrated translation of limbata,
this is at
.
Arnold (1917: 383) gave an illustrated translation of cognata
boerorum, this is at
.
Bolton's modern description (1983) is at
.
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WORKER
(drawn specimen from Nigeria) - TL 2.17 mm, HL 0.56, HW 0.39, SL
0.36, PW 0.28 (in my guide as Serrastruma species T¹)
Bolton (1983) TL 2.4-3.0 mm, HL 0.54-0.64, HW 0.44-0.52, SL
0.34-0.41, PW 0.28-0.36
Erect hairs relatively long, narrow and clavate, several on the
occiput, paired fine long sinuous setae at the humeral angles of
pronotum and on the head above the eyes. Eyes small. Alitrunk
reticulopunctate only on the dorsum of the mesonotum and
propodeum. Colour golden yellow (Bolton, 1983: 350, illustrated).
Brown (1952) felt that it was at home in the more open forest
and savannah, with colonies in rotten wood, under stones, and in
the soil cover. |
The Bolton (1983) gave more details of the Nigerian finding as
Strumigenys (Trichoscapa) escherichi strain cognata variety
obscuriventris named by Santschi (1914b, from the
Silvestri 1913 expedition collection at Olokemeji); this was
changed by Santschi (1915) to variety fusciventris (also
as such in Wheeler, 1922).
Bolton (1983) gave the distribution as throughout eastern and
southern Africa, with many records. He was puzzled by the Nigerian
record, the collection by F. Silvestri at Olokemeji, commenting
that the sample might represent an introduction or a mislabelled
series. Wheeler (1922) listed that Nigerian record, also escherichi
subspecies cognata from Guinea (Kindia, by F.
Silvestri), both are in Santschi (1914d).
In Nigeria, I collected it from soil and leaf litter at
the base of a cocoa tree, both at CRIN. The species is quite
distinctive, however, and my illustration seems unmistakably simoni,
even though the specimens are smaller than the wide range given by
Bolton. A specimen was in my voucher collection deposited with
Bolton so the lack of its inclusion in his review is a puzzle.
Bolton (1983) seems also to have missed the report by Bernard
(1952) of 4 workers from Guinea, Mt. Nimba, Nion Crest,
1300 m, which he found matched the race "Strumigenys
(Cephaloxys) escherichi subspecies cognata Santschi"
from Congo and Angola; plus his note that the western form of the
common (?) escherichi, had been taken in numbers notably
at Banco, Ivory Coast.
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The
photomontage is of a specimen collected from Usambara Mts, Tanzania;
Zigi Lodge, Amani NR; S 5°05' E 38°38'; 2200 m; Vasily
Grebennikov, 9-11.x.2002. This shows the arcuate propodeum dorsum
of biconvexa as shown by Santschi (1914b) for a specimen
from Kenya (shown above). Other images can be seen in the folder
at -
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