Cataulacus tardus

Identification
Santschi notes that Cataulacus schoutedeni is close to Cataulacus tardus, but 'is smaller, the (propodeal) spines relatively longer, the sculpture more feeble'. Variations of this form are usual and may be universal amongst species of the huberi group, and the only real difference separating the types of the two forms in the present species (apart from obvious size differences) is the presence of an angle separating the vertex from the occiput in tardus, absent from schoutedeni. As has been noted the occurrence of this angle is restricted to large workers of the species and no grounds remain for maintaining the two names as separate species. (Bolton 1974)

Distribution
This taxon was described from Guinea. It is also found in the Congo.

Nomenclature

 *  tardus. Cataulacus tardus Santschi, 1914d: 372, fig. 33 (w.) GUINEA. Senior synonym of schoutedeni: Bolton, 1974a: 27.
 * schoutedeni. Cataulacus schoutedeni Santschi, 1919c: 248 (w.q.) DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF CONGO. Junior synonym of tardus: Bolton, 1974a: 27.

Worker
Bolton (1974) - TL 5.4 – 6.8, HL 1.40 – 1.70, HW 1.58 – 1.96, CI 113 - 117, EL 0.44 – 0.54, IO 22 - 28, IOD 1.20 – 1.48, SL 0.84 – 0.98, SI 50 - 51, PW 1.24 – 1.56, AL 1.54 – 1.86, MTL 0.88 – 0.94 (7 measured).

Occipital margin usually without crest separating vertex from occiput, the two surfaces confluent; but in some large workers an acute angle separates the two surfaces. Occipital comers without teeth or denticles, rounded; the sides of the head behind the eyes often irregular but never denticulate. Margins of alitrunk not denticulate; the pronotum strongly marginate, the remainder not marginate, with the dorsum rounding evenly into the sides. Pronotal margination expanded laterally, subrectangular in shape, the edges straight or irregular and strongly converging posteriorly to the mesonotal surface. Promesonotal suture absent or represented in the largest workers by a very faint and extremely shallow arcuate impression. Propodeum with a pair of long, strong, acute spines, as long as or longer than the dorsal length of the petiole. First gastral tergite not marginate.

Dorsum of head extremely finely, densely and faintly reticulate-punctate, with a loose, very fine, scattered rugoreticulum. In some specimens the rugulation is effaced or nearly so over some areas of the cephalic dorsum. Dorsal alitrunk similarly sculptured but with the rugulae tending to assume a longitudinal direction. First gastral tergite predominantly or totally finely reticulate-punctate, but in some specimens a few very faint rugulae are visible.

Dorsal surfaces of head, alitrunk and gaster without hairs. Margins of head behind eyes and margins of alitrunk without hairs, or the former with one or two minute hairs which, however, do not project freely beyond the margin.

Type Material
Bolton (1974):

Holotype worker, GUINEA: Mamou, 24.viii.1912 (Silvestri) (NM, Basle) [examined].

Syntype workers, female, Zaire: Congo da Lemba, i-ii.1913 (R. Mayne) (NM, Basle; MRAC, Tervuren) [examined].