Gracilidris

Gracilidris is a genus of dolichoderine ants with nocturnal behaviour; thought to have gone extinct 15-20 million years ago, they have been found in Paraguay, Brazil, and Argentina and were described in 2006.[4]

Gracilidris
G. pombero worker from Paraguay
Scientific classification
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Gracilidris

Wild & Cuezzo, 2006[1]
Type species
Gracilidris pombero[2]
Diversity[3]
2 species

The single existing fossil in Dominican amber makes the genus a Lazarus taxon. The only known extant species, Gracilidris pombero, nests in small colonies in the soil. These ants have been described only very recently and little is known about them.

Species

gollark: You can't really tell when those would have entered use *anyway*.
gollark: "Individual weapon"? So if you glue two together, it's allowed?
gollark: Glass houses are the most vulnerable to orbital laser strikes, yes.
gollark: I mean, the UK seems to very consistently not have guns, but it also consistently has knives and there was never a giant pile of existing guns.
gollark: I said "might". I don't know if it does actually apply in this case.

References

  1. Gracilidris Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine in Hymenoptera Name Server
  2. "Genus: Gracilidris". antweb.org. AntWeb. Retrieved 13 October 2013.
  3. Bolton, B. (2014). "Gracilidris". AntCat. Retrieved 4 July 2014.
  4. Wild, A. L. and F. Cuezzo. 2006. Rediscovery of a fossil Dolichoderine ant lineage (Hymenoptera: Formicidae: Dolichoderinae) and a description of a new genus from South America. Zootaxa 1142: 57-68. ISSN: 1175-5334 PDF


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