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

Fossil Azteca alpha

Non-Parasitic Queen Não Gamergate
Nome cient.
Azteca alpha
Tribo
Leptomyrmecini
Subfamília
Dolichoderinae
Autor
Wilson, 1985
Fóssil
Sim (espécie fóssil)
Distribuição
Encontrado em 1 países

Introdução

Azteca alpha is an extinct ant species known only from fossils preserved in Dominican amber from the Miocene epoch, approximately 20 million years ago . These ants were incredibly abundant in the ancient forests of what is now the Dominican Republic, making up roughly 30 to 50 percent of all ant fossils found in these deposits . They belong to the genus Azteca, which still exists today as tree-dwelling ants throughout the Neotropics. The most remarkable aspect of this fossil species is the preserved evidence of its behavior. One amber piece contains nine workers together with twenty-three scale insects, providing the earliest known proof of ants tending these sap-sucking bugs for honeydew . This discovery shows that the complex relationship between Azteca ants and scale insects was already well established by the Miocene epoch.

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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

Azteca alpha is a fossil species and does not require a caresheet.