Dorylus (Typhlopone) fulvus (Westwood)
Type location North Africa (Typhlopone fulva,
Westwood, 1839: 219, illustrated, worker).
Subspecies badius (Gerstacker, 1859: 261, worker) from Mozambique, with
its synonym rhodesiae (Forel, 1913a:
111, worker) from Zimbabwe; crosi (Santschi, 1926e:
230, worker & male) from Algeria; dentifrons
(Wasmann, 1904b: 673, worker) from Zaïre, with its synonym stramineus
(Stitz, 1910: 128, workers) from Cameroun; eurous (Emery, 1915g: 5, illustrated, workers) from Ethiopia;
glabratus (Shuckard, 1840c: 317,
male) from Gambia; juvenculus (Shuckard, 1840c: 318,
male) from Morocco, with its junior synonym oraniensis, Lucas, 1849: 302,
illustrated, worker, synonymy by Emery, 1888b: 350); mordax (Santschi, 1931d: 407, synonym replaced impressus)
from Ivory Coast; obscurior(Wheeler, 1925b: 1; workers; but use of variety obscurior Santschi,
1914d: 333 - collected by F. Silvestri) from Guinea; punicus
(Santschi, 1926e: 231, illustrated, worker & male; Santschi,
1931d: 401, illustrated, queen) from Tunisia; ruficeps
(Santschi, 1926e: 232, male) from Lebanon; and, saharensis
(Santschi, 1926e: 231, illustrated, male) from "Sahara".
Junior synonyms clausii (Joseph, 1882: 47, worker) from North Africa;
dahlbomii (Westwood, 1840b: 88, illustrated, worker), kirbii (Shuckard, 1840b: 265, worker), spinolae
(Shuckard, 1840c: 327, worker) and thwaitsii (Shuckard, 1840c: 326, worker)(location not known), shuckardi from
Guinea (Westwood, 1840b: 88, illustrated, worker; Ritsema, 1874: 182,
male, is a paper on New Guinea!); all forms known (see Bolton,
1995) .
Gerstaecker's (1859) description of badius is - "Dorylus
badius, n.sp.; pedunculo abdominis quadrato, mandibulis
elongatis, acutis, dilute rufo-brunneus, cano-tomentosus, abdomine
sericeo-micante, segmento ultimo laevi, apice rufo-piloso; capite
negro, vertice alto elevato, alarum venis nigro-fuscis. Long. lin.
14-15½. Mas."
Santschi (1928d) provided a fresh description of the type
specimen, made by W.C. Crawley, of the Oxford (University) Museum;
that together with Santschi's description of impressus is
at .
Shuckard's (1840c) description of glabratus is at
.
Shuckard's (1840c) description of juvenculus is at
.
Lucas's (1849) description of oraniensis is at
.
Wasmann's (1904b) description of dentifrons is at
.
Stitz's (1910) description of stramineus is at
.
Santschi's (1914b) description of badius is at
.
Santschi's (1914d) description of obscurior is at
.
Emery (1915g) described eurous and provided illustrated
comparative notes - these are at
.
Wheeler (1922: 49) gave comparative notes on obscurior and
provided illustrations - these are at
.
The images (above right) appear to suggest the West African/Congo
Basin form, dentifrons, may be significantly different,
with rhodesiae and badius being a smaller East
African form. |