Abstract

We describe for the first time the male of Lepidotrigona nitidiventris (Smith, 1857), emphasizing the structure of the male genital capsule and metasomal sterna four through seven. Our identification of the male as L. nitidiventris is based on our examination of the worker holotype (type locality Mt. Ophir, Peninsular Malaysia) which we found to match workers from the same nest as males found in western Thailand. The species belongs to the L. nitidiventris species group, comprising L. latipes (Friese), L. palavanica (Cockerell), L. trochanterica (Cockerell), with L. nitidiventris as the type species of the genus. No males of these species were previously known. We examined the holotype workers of the three other species and confirm all four as clearly different species. We propose, however, that the obviously smaller L. palavanica should not be included in the large-sized group of Lepidotrigona.

Highlights

  • Stingless bees (Meliponini) are advanced eusocial insects (Michener, 1974; Quezada‐Euán, 2018) and are among the most important pollinators in tropical and subtropical habitats (Roubik, 1989; Heard, 1999)

  • Diagnosis: Lepidotrigona nitidiventris is the type species of the genus and the nominate species of the species group which comprises the largest species of the genus

  • Our finding that the holotype worker of L. nitidiventris matched the workers from the two nests from western Thailand came as a surprise because of the geographic distance between the type locality and the new sites

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Summary

Introduction

Stingless bees (Meliponini) are advanced eusocial insects (Michener, 1974; Quezada‐Euán, 2018) and are among the most important pollinators in tropical and subtropical habitats (Roubik, 1989; Heard, 1999). After Rasmussen & Cameron (2010) determined that Old World Trigona are genetically divergent from New World Trigona sensu stricto, Lepidotrigona was elevated to generic level; L. nitidiventris is the type species of the genus. Lepidotrigona has been divided into three groups based primarily on size (Schwarz, 1939; Rasmussen, 2008, 2013). This classification was followed by Attasopa et al (2018). Species level separation involves a combination of body size, colour of integument on metasomal terga, colour of hairs on the head and mesosoma (Schwarz, 1939; Sakagami, 1975).

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