Metalasius pumilus
- Sci. Name
- Metalasius pumilus
- Tribe
- Lasiini
- Subfamily
- Formicinae
- Author
- Mayr, 1868
- Fossil
- Yes (fossil species)
- Distribution
- Found in 0 countries
Introduction
Metalasius pumilus is an extinct ant species known only from Baltic amber deposits dating to the Late Eocene epoch (37.2-33.9 million years ago). Workers are exceedingly small, measuring under 2mm in total length, making them among the smallest ants ever discovered . The species was originally described as Lasius pumilus by Mayr in 1868 before being transferred to the genus Metalasius in 2022 based on phylogenetic analysis . Workers are characterized by their lack of standing setae on the head and mesosoma, large compound eyes, and short, broad third antennal segment . The genus Metalasius is closely related to modern Lasius ants, representing an ancient lineage that went extinct millions of years ago.
No caresheet needed
Metalasius pumilus is a fossil species and does not require a caresheet.
Community Blogs
No specimens available
We couldn't find any AntWeb specimens for Metalasius pumilus in our database.
Literature
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Metalasius pumilus is a fossil species and cannot be sold.