Anochetus brevidentatus
- Nama Ilmiah
- Anochetus brevidentatus
- Tribe
- Ponerini
- Subfamili
- Ponerinae
- Penulis
- MacKay, 1991
- Fosil
- Ya (spesies fosil)
- Distribusi
- Ditemukan di 0 negara
Pendahuluan
Anochetus brevidentatus is an extinct species of trap-jaw ant that lived approximately 17 million years ago during the Miocene epoch . Scientists know this species only from a single worker preserved in Dominican Amber, described by Mackay in 1991 . The name "brevidentatus" refers to the short teeth on its petiolar node, which distinguish it from closely related species like Anochetus kempfi and Anochetus haytianus . As a fossil species, it is not available for keeping and exists only in the scientific record. This species belongs to the inermis species group and helps scientists understand how trap-jaw ants evolved over millions of years . The preserved specimen shows the characteristic trap-jaw mandibles found in modern relatives, suggesting it was likely a small predator that hunted tiny prey, though no one has ever observed living colonies . Like all Ponerinae ants, it would have had a functional stinger for defense.
No caresheet needed
Anochetus brevidentatus is a fossil species and does not require a caresheet.
Blog Komunitas
Tidak ada spesimen yang tersedia
Kami tidak dapat menemukan spesimen AntWeb untuk Anochetus brevidentatus di database kami.
Literatur
Memuat peta distribusi...Tidak berlaku
Anochetus brevidentatus adalah spesies fosil dan tidak dapat dijual.