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

Fossil Pachycondyla eocenica

Non-Parasitic Queen Nee Gamergate
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Pachycondyla eocenica
Tribus
Ponerini
Subfamilie
Ponerinae
Auteur
Dlussky & Wedmann, 2012
Fossiel
Ja (fossiele soort)
Incertae sedis
Incertae sedis in Genus
Verspreiding
Gevonden in 0 landen

Introductie

Pachycondyla eocenica is an extinct ant species known only from fossil specimens found in the Messel Pit deposits in Germany, dating to the Eocene epoch about 48 million years ago . The only known specimen is a winged queen (gyne) with a total body length of approximately 8.8 mm, showing robust morphology typical of ponerine ants . This species lived in warm, humid subtropical forests surrounding a volcanic lake, as indicated by the Messel fossil site . The fossil provides rare insight into ancient ant diversity, with well-preserved details like head proportions and mandible structure, but no living colonies exist today .

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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

Pachycondyla eocenica is a fossil species and does not require a caresheet.