Basiceros enana
- 学名
- Basiceros enana
- 族
- Attini
- 亚科
- Myrmicinae
- 命名者
- Fiorentino <i>et al.</i>, 2025
- 化石种
- 是(化石物种)
- 地理分布
- 分布于 0 个国家/地区
物种引言
Basiceros enana is an extinct ant species known from a single worker preserved in Miocene-aged Dominican amber, approximately 16 million years old . This tiny ant measured just 5.13mm in total length, making it one of the smallest Basiceros species ever discovered - its head width is about 80% that of the smallest known living species, Basiceros disciger . The specimen was found in amber from the Northern mines of Santiago Province, Dominican Republic, representing a clear example of local extinction in the Caribbean ant fauna . Like its living relatives, this fossil likely had the characteristic dirt ant appearance - workers accumulate soil and litter particles on their bodies as camouflage, a trait that increases with age as foragers venture outside the nest . This species is the sister to all other known Basiceros species, representing an ancient lineage that has since gone extinct from the region .
No caresheet needed
Basiceros enana is a fossil species and does not require a caresheet.
社区博客
暂无标本图片
我们的数据库中未找到 Basiceros enana 的 AntWeb 标本图像。
科学文献
正在加载分布地图...不适用
Basiceros enana 是化石物种,无法进行活体交易。