Lasius punctulatus
- Nom. cient.
- Lasius punctulatus
- Tribu
- Lasiini
- Subfamilia
- Formicinae
- Autor
- Mayr, 1868
- Fósil
- Sí (especie fósil)
- Incertae Sedis
- Incertae Sedis in Genus
- Distribución
- Encontrado en 0 países
Introducción
Lasius punctulatus is an extinct ant species that lived approximately 44-49 million years ago during the Late Eocene period. These ants were preserved in Baltic amber, making them known only from fossil records. The queens measured 3.5-4.5mm in body length, making them smaller than related species like Lasius schiefferdeckeri (4-6mm). The species has a distinctive dense punctation pattern on its body and abundant standing hairs, which distinguishes it from similar species . This ant was originally described by Mayr in 1868 from Baltic amber specimens and was later synonymized with L. pumilus before being revived as a valid species by Dlussky in 2011 based on morphological differences in pilosity . This is a fossil species that cannot be kept in captivity. There are no living colonies of Lasius punctulatus - they went extinct millions of years ago. This caresheet exists only for educational purposes to document what we know about this extinct species from the fossil record.
No caresheet needed
Lasius punctulatus is a fossil species and does not require a caresheet.
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Literatura
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Lasius punctulatus es una especie fósil y no se puede vender.