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PLEA
FOR POLYRHACHIS SPECIMENS FROM SULAWESI
Dear colleagues,
As
most of you would be aware, I am working on the taxonomy of ants
of the genus Polyrhachis with a revision of the subgenus
Cyrtomyrma almost completed and one on the subgenus Hagiomyrma
is well advanced. I am also close to completing a paper on Polyrhachis
of Sulawesi, however, since I started working on this fascinating
project, securing material for the review has proved problematic.
At present, my paper deals mostly
with the material collected during Project Wallace, the 1985 joint
expedition of the Royal Entomological Society of London and the
Indonesian Institute of Sciences (LIPI) to North Sulawesi, with
Nigel Stork as a leader. Also included are considerable collections
made by Martin Brendel of the Natural History Museum, London and
Kees van Achterberg of the Nationaal Natuurhistorisch Museum, Leiden,
both before and after the expedition. In addition, material collected
by Bruno Gobin of the Katholieke Universiteit, Leuven, Seiki Yamane
of the Kagoshima University and Maryati Mohamed of the University
Malaysia Sabah, provided numerous Polyrhachis specimens from other
parts of Sulawesi. The most recent material, including several new
species, resulted from the 1999 Field Survey, jointly conducted
by the Institute of Tropical Agriculture, Kyushu University, Indonesian
Institute of Sciences (LIPI) and the Hasanuddin University, Ujung
Pandang, with ants collected by Kazuo Ogata.
Frederic Smith described the first
twenty-five Polyrhachis species from Sulawesi, collected
in 1856 and 1857 at Makassar and in 1859 at Menado by Alfred Russel
Wallace. In the following years, a further twenty-one new species
and subspecific forms were added by various authors, including Emery,
Forel and Viehmeyer, bringing the number of Polyrhachis species
described from the island to forty-six. This number includes eight
species (and subspecies) described from copal and eleven, which
are now considered junior synonyms of senior taxa described from
Sulawesi or from elsewhere in South East Asia. In addition, over
twenty extralimital species were reported from Sulawesi by various
authors, however, at least half of these records remain doubtful,
while some are obviously erroneous.
At present my manuscript lists eighty-one
species from Sulawesi, including twenty-two, which are described
as new and three species previously known only from other parts
of Indonesia. Included in the total number are also species not
recently collected, but having Sulawesi as their original provenance,
or being confidently identified from reliable sources. It has become
apparent that some species reported from Sulawesi in the past are
not represented in more recent collections in spite of a wide range
of collecting methods used. These included fogging (Brendel, Stork),
Malaise trap (van Achterberg), general hand collecting (Gobin) and
time sampling (Ogata). However, considering that Project Wallace
was centralized on a relatively small area of North Sulawesi and
with only very limited recent collections from other parts of the
island available for this review, I believe that the present paper
does not reflect fully the richness of the Sulawesian Polyrhachis
fauna.
Unfortunately my own trip to Sulawesi,
planned together with Simon Robson of James Cook University, Townsville,
didn't eventuate, primarily because of a shortfall in financial
support and partly because of some concern regarding our safety.
I therefore plea to all who have ever collected on Sulawesi, or
have any Polyrhachis specimens from Sulawesi in their care,
to lend me this material, so I can successfully complete my work.
Any loan or donation of material, dry or wet, will be appreciated
and duly acknowledged.
Rudy Kohout
Honorary Research Fellow
Higher Entomology Section
Queensland Museum
PO Box 3300
SOUTH BRISBANE QLD 4101
AUSTRALIA
Tel: +61 7 3840 7704
Fax: +61 7 3846 1226
E-mail: rudyk@qm.qld.gov.au
or:kohout@powerup.com.au
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