Myrmecia arnoldi
Myrmecia arnoldi is a bull ant of the genus Myrmecia. Like all bull ants except for one species in this genus, the Myrmecia arnoldi is native to Australia.
Myrmecia arnoldi | |
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M. arnoldi worker | |
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Species: | M. arnoldi |
Binomial name | |
Myrmecia arnoldi Clark, 1951 | |
Description
The first specimens of the Myrmecia arnoldi were found in Western Australia and then described by John Clark in 1951.[1] The length of the workers are 18-20 millimetres long. Their head and gasters are typically black, thorax and some other features are brown and their mandibles are yellow. Queens are typically larger and males are smaller, but information for these two castes are not very clear.[2]
gollark: It worked great, because Terra didn't actually say stuff I particularly cared about receiving quickly.
gollark: On the TC6.1 test server.
gollark: Redstonet was slow enough. We used it for communication between the TSS Explorer and GSS It's Technically A Starship Okay.
gollark: I'm thinking one bit per second.
gollark: ToggleNet, as we could call it, could be just like Redstonet but even more glacially slow.
References
- Wheeler, GC (1971). Ant larvae of the subfamily Myrmeciinae (Hymenoptera: Formicidae). Pan-Pac. p. 246.
- Clark, John (1951). The Formicidae of Australia (Volume 1) (PDF). Melbourne: Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, Australia. pp. 36–37.
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