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

Fossil Anochetus brevidentatus

Non-Parasitic Queen Nee Gamergate
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Anochetus brevidentatus
Tribus
Ponerini
Subfamilie
Ponerinae
Auteur
MacKay, 1991
Fossiel
Ja (fossiele soort)
Verspreiding
Gevonden in 0 landen

Introductie

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.

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Status per land, volgens Kass et al. 2022 & Wong et al. 2023

Inheems Invasief Geïntroduceerd (binnenshuis) Onderschept Onbekend
2000 - 2026
Fossil

No caresheet needed

Anochetus brevidentatus is a fossil species and does not require a caresheet.