The Megachilidae (Hymenoptera, Apoidea, Apiformes) of the Democratic Republic of Congo curated at the Royal Museum for Central Africa (RMCA, Belgium)

被引:1
|
作者
Nkulu, Alain Tshibungu [1 ,2 ]
Pauly, Alain [3 ]
Dorchin, Achik [4 ,5 ]
Vereecken, Nicolas J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Libre Bruxelles ULB, Brussels Bioengn Sch, Agroecol Lab, Ave FD Roosevelt 50, B-1050 Brussels, Belgium
[2] Univ Lubumbashi UNILU, Fac Sci Agronom, Ecol Restorat Ecol & Landscape, Lubumbashi, DEM REP CONGO
[3] Royal Belgian Inst Nat Sci RBINS, OD Taxon & Phylogeny, Rue Vautier 29, B-1000 Brussels, Belgium
[4] Royal Museum Cent Africa RMCA, Entomol Sect, Biol Dept, Leuvensesteenweg 13, B-3080 Tervuren, Belgium
[5] Univ Mons, Res Inst Biosci, Zool Lab, Pl Parc 20, B-7000 Mons, Belgium
关键词
Entomological collections; colonial era; wild bees; biodiversity; decolonization; TAXONOMIC REVISION; BIODIVERSITY DATA; COLLECTIONS; BEES; PHYLOGENY; CLASSIFICATION; DIGITIZATION; BIOGEOGRAPHY; POLLINATORS; ANTHIDIINI;
D O I
10.11646/zootaxa.5392.1.1
中图分类号
Q95 [动物学];
学科分类号
071002 ;
摘要
Natural history collections are a cornerstone of entomology, and the conservation of specimens is the essential prerequisite for the development of research into systematics, biogeography, ecology, evolution and other disciplines. Yet, specimens collected during decades of entomological research conducted in less developed countries across Sub-Saharan Africa on pests, beneficial insects and insect biodiversity in general have largely been exported to be permanently preserved in developed countries, mainly in Europe and the United States of America. This is particularly true for the Democratic Republic of the Congo's (DRC) diverse wild bee fauna, which has been investigated throughout the colonial period by visiting or resident entomologists and missionaries who have then transferred their collected material primarily to Belgium as part of a wider legacy of scientific exploration and colonialism. Digitizing NHC is one way to mitigate this current bias, by making samples accessible to researchers from the target postcolonial countries as well as to the wider international scientific community. In this study, we compiled and digitized 6,490 specimens records relevant to 195 wild bee species grouped in 18 genera within the biodiverse family Megachilidae, essentially from the colonial era (i.e., mostly between 1905-1960, with additional records up to 1978), and curated at the Royal Museum for Central Africa in Belgium. We provide a detailed catalogue of all records with updated locality and province names, including 29 species only available as type specimens. We also explore the historical patterns of diversity and distribution across DRC, and we provide a list of the research entomologists involved. This study is an important first step that uses digital technologies to democratize and repatriate important aspects of DRC ' s natural heritage of insect biodiversity, to stimulate more contemporary field surveys and modern taxonomic revisions, as well as to identify and characterize research gaps and biodiversity shortfalls in some of the less-explored regions of Sub-Saharan Africa.
引用
收藏
页码:1 / 103
页数:103
相关论文
共 36 条
  • [1] Colonial Amnesias, Photographic Memories, and Demographic Biopolitics at the Royal Museum for Central Africa (RMCA)
    Hasian, Marouf, Jr.
    [J]. THIRD WORLD QUARTERLY, 2012, 33 (03) : 475 - 493
  • [2] Re-examination of the type specimens of Lecithoceridae (Lepidoptera), deposited in the Royal Museum for Central Africa (RMCA), Belgium, with descriptions of ten new species from DR Congo belonging to Thubdora Park and Torodora Meyrick
    Park, Kyu-Tek
    de Prins, Willy
    [J]. ZOOTAXA, 2019, 4571 (04) : 451 - 476
  • [3] Exhibition review Decolonising the Royal Museum for Central Africa in Belgium's Second Museum Age
    Van Bockhaven, Vicky
    [J]. ANTIQUITY, 2019, 93 (370) : 1082 - 1087
  • [4] More than red rubber and figures alone: A critical appraisal of the memory of the Congo exhibition at the Royal Museum for Central Africa, Tervuren, Belgium ('Tintin in the Congo')
    Gewald, Jan-Bart
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF AFRICAN HISTORICAL STUDIES, 2006, 39 (03): : 471 - 486
  • [5] Critical Museology, (Post) Colonial Communication, and the Gradual Mastering of Traumatic Pasts at the Royal Museum for Central Africa (RMCA)
    Hasian, Marouf
    Wood, Rulon
    [J]. WESTERN JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION, 2010, 74 (02) : 128 - 149
  • [6] First Early Hominin from Central Africa (Ishango, Democratic Republic of Congo)
    Crevecoeur, Isabelle
    Skinner, Matthew M.
    Bailey, Shara E.
    Gunz, Philipp
    Bortoluzzi, Silvia
    Brooks, Alison S.
    Burlet, Christian
    Cornelissen, Els
    De Clerck, Nora
    Maureille, Bruno
    Semal, Patrick
    Vanbrabant, Yves
    Wood, Bernard
    [J]. PLOS ONE, 2014, 9 (01):
  • [7] Geoethics and dimensions of vulnerability in Central Africa: the case study of the Democratic Republic of the Congo
    De Pascale, Francesco
    [J]. AIMS GEOSCIENCES, 2021, 7 (03): : 440 - 456
  • [8] The environmental drivers of bacterial meningitis epidemics in the Democratic Republic of Congo, central Africa
    Mazamay, Serge
    Broutin, Helene
    Bompangue, Didier
    Muyembe, Jean-Jacques
    Guegan, Jean-Francois
    [J]. PLOS NEGLECTED TROPICAL DISEASES, 2020, 14 (10): : 1 - 16
  • [9] Synopsis of the genus Chlorophytum (Asparagaceae) in Central Africa (Democratic Republic of the Congo, Rwanda, Burundi)
    Meerts, Pierre
    Bjora, Charlotte Sletten
    [J]. PLANT ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2012, 145 (03) : 373 - 409
  • [10] New and interesting Eunotia (Bacillariophya) taxa from the Democratic Republic of the Congo, tropical central Africa
    Taylor, Jonathan C.
    Cocquyt, Christine
    Mayama, Shigeki
    [J]. PLANT ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2016, 149 (03) : 291 - 307