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

Fossil Formica quadrata

Non-Parasitic Queen Hayır Gamergate
Bilimsel Adı
Formica quadrata
Oymak (Tribe)
Formicini
Alt Familya
Formicinae
Yazar (Tanımlayan)
Holl, 1829
Fosil
Evet (fosil türü)
Incertae Sedis
Incertae Sedis in Family
Dağılım
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Giriş

Formica quadrata is an extinct ant species known only from Baltic amber deposits dating to the late Eocene epoch, approximately 44-49 million years ago. The species was originally described by Friedrich Holl in 1829 based on a single specimen preserved in amber. The head is large but square-shaped with two pointed posterior ends, and the thorax bears two spines . Radchenko et al. (2021) have questioned whether this species actually belongs in the genus Formica, noting that based on the original description, it cannot be unambiguously assigned to any ant genus - it is considered incertae sedis (uncertain placement) within the Formicidae family .

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Ülkeye göre durum, kaynak: Kass et al. 2022 & Wong et al. 2023

Yerli İstilacı Tanıtılmış (kapalı alan) Yakalardan Geçmiş Bilinmiyor
2000 - 2026
Fossil

No caresheet needed

Formica quadrata is a fossil species and does not require a caresheet.