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

Fossil Archimyrmex wedmannae

Non-Parasitic Queen Não Gamergate
Nome cient.
Archimyrmex wedmannae
Subfamília
Myrmeciinae
Autor
Dlussky, 2012
Fóssil
Sim (espécie fóssil)
Distribuição
Encontrado em 0 países

Introdução

Archimyrmex wedmannae is an extinct species of bulldog ant that lived approximately 47 million years ago during the Middle Eocene epoch. The only known specimen is a fossilized winged queen preserved in the famous Messel Pit in Germany. This was a large ant - around 23 millimeters long - with distinctive long mandibles approximately the length of her head, large oval eyes, and a well-developed sting. The fossil represents the first European record of the genus Archimyrmex, which was previously known only from fossil sites in the United States and Argentina . Because this species is known only from a single fossil impression, we have no information about colony behavior, worker castes, diet, or social structure. The specimen provides only a snapshot of what the reproductive female looked like during the Eocene, when Germany had a warm, tropical climate similar to modern-day Southeast Asia. This species cannot be kept in captivity as it went extinct millions of years before humans evolved.

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Estado por país, de Kass et al. 2022 & Wong et al. 2023

Nativa Invasiva Introduzida (interior) Interceptada Desconhecido
2000 - 2026
Fossil

No caresheet needed

Archimyrmex wedmannae is a fossil species and does not require a caresheet.