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Morphological caste and sex differences in the Taiwanese stingless bee Trigona ventralis hoozana (Hymenoptera: Apidae)
Authors:I-Hsin SUNG,Sô  ichi YAMANE,Kai-Kuang HO,Wen-Jer WU, Yue-Wen CHEN
Affiliation:Division of Crop Environment, Tainan District Agricultural Improvement Station, Tainan,; Department of Entomology, College of Bioresources and Agriculture, National Taiwan University, Taipei and; Department of Applied Animal Science, National I-Lan Institute of Technology, I-Lan, Taiwan;and; Biological Laboratory, Faculty of Education, Ibaraki University, Mito, Japan
Abstract:To examine morphological differences among queens, workers and males, 14 external body characters were measured in two colonies of the Taiwanese stingless bee Trigona ventralis hoozana. Queens were largest in all of the body parts measured except eye width and mesoscutum length, and values for most variables in queens did not overlap with those of workers and males. In contrast, the worker : male size ratios for 11 variables were close to 1.0, showing that overall body size and shape of workers resembled that of males rather than of queens. Males had the largest eyes and their mesoscutum length was comparable to that of queens. ancova between 14 morphometric variables and mesoscutum width chosen as standard body size showed that allometric growth in most variables was not linear. Plotting of some variables on mesoscutum width showed that queens had a proportionally wider first metasomal tergum and longer antennal scape, but a proportionally narrower head and eye than workers and males. These tests suggest that the morphological caste differences in this species belong to a category of complete dimorphism.
Keywords:allometry    dimorphism    male    Meliponini    morphometry    queen    worker
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