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

Fossil Dolichoderus punctatus

Non-Parasitic Queen No Gamergate
Nom. sci.
Dolichoderus punctatus
Tribù
Dolichoderini
Sottofamiglia
Dolichoderinae
Autore
Dlussky, 2008
Fossile
Sì (specie fossile)
Distribuzione
Trovata in 0 paesi

Introduzione

Dolichoderus punctatus is an extinct ant species that lived during the Late Eocene period, approximately 44-49 million years ago. Workers measured approximately 5 mm in total body length. This species has been found preserved in Baltic amber, making it one of the few Dolichoderine ants known from the fossil record of that region. Distinctive features include a strongly convex head with well-expressed occipital angles, a concave occipital margin, and a unique sculpture pattern of large, isolated pits on the head, pronotum, mesonotum, and propodeum . Unlike living ant species that antkeepers can raise, D. punctatus exists only as fossil specimens trapped in amber. This makes it impossible to keep or study in captivity. If you're interested in keeping Dolichoderus ants, consider looking at related living species in the genus that are available in the antkeeping hobby.

Caricamento mappa di distribuzione...

Stato per paese, da Kass et al. 2022 & Wong et al. 2023

Nativa Invasiva Introdotta (interni) Intercettata Sconosciuto
2000 - 2026
Fossil

No caresheet needed

Dolichoderus punctatus is a fossil species and does not require a caresheet.