Scientific illustration of Carebara thorali ant - showing key identification features including head, thorax, and gaster.

Fossil Carebara thorali

Non-Parasitic Queen Non Gamergate
Nom sci.
Carebara thorali
Tribu
Crematogastrini
Sous-famille
Myrmicinae
Auteur
Théobald, 1937
Fossile
Oui (espèce fossile)
Distribution
Trouvé dans 0 pays

Introduction

Carebara thorali is an extinct ant species known only from a single male specimen preserved in Late Oligocene gypsum deposits from what is now southern France. The fossil dates to approximately 23-27.8 million years ago during the Chattian stage. This species was originally described as Erebomyrma thorali by Théobald in 1937 before being reclassified to the genus Carebara. The specimen measures 6mm in total body length and shows typical Myrmicinae features including a two-segmented petiole and characteristic wing venation . Based on related extant Carebara species, this ant would have been a small, ground-nesting species that lived in warm, likely subtropical environments in what is now France during the Oligocene period.

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Statut par pays, de Kass et al. 2022 & Wong et al. 2023

Indigène Envahissante Introduite (intérieur) Interceptée Inconnu
2000 - 2026
Fossil

No caresheet needed

Carebara thorali is a fossil species and does not require a caresheet.