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

Fossil Myrmica paradoxa

Non-Parasitic Queen Não Gamergate
Nome cient.
Myrmica paradoxa
Tribo
Myrmicini
Subfamília
Myrmicinae
Autor
Radchenko <i>et al.</i>, 2007
Fóssil
Sim (espécie fóssil)
Distribuição
Encontrado em 0 países

Introdução

Myrmica paradoxa is an extinct ant species known only from three worker specimens preserved in late Eocene amber from what is now Germany. This fossil species lived approximately 37.8-33.9 million years ago during the Priabonian age. Workers measured about 6mm in body length, making them comparable in size to many modern Myrmica species. The species was named 'paradoxa' because of its unusual combination of features - it had typical Myrmica characteristics like pectinate spurs on the hind tibiae and a three-segmented antennal club, but also displayed atypical traits including a short, robust mesosoma and very short blunt propodeal denticles instead of the longer spines typical of most Myrmica. This combination is so unusual that researchers have noted the species superficially resembles members of the genus Manica, though it differs in key anatomical details. As a fossil species preserved in amber, Myrmica paradoxa cannot be kept in captivity - it went extinct tens of millions of years before humans existed .

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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

Myrmica paradoxa is a fossil species and does not require a caresheet.