Zigrasimecia ferox
†Zigrasimecia ferox Temporal range: Early Cenomanian, Late Cretaceous Burmese amber, Kachin State, Myanmar | |
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Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Class: | Insecta |
Order: | Hymenoptera |
Family: | Formicidae |
Subfamily: | Zigrasimeciinae |
Genus: | Zigrasimecia |
Species: | †Z. ferox |
Binomial name | |
†Zigrasimecia ferox Perrichot, 2014 |
Photo Gallery
Identification
Chaul (2023) - Small species. Head subrectangular (longer than wide) in full-face view. Body pilosity composed of filiform, sparse, short, and erect setae. Dorsal mesosomal outline convex; propodeal dorsal and posterior surfaces separated by a strongly marked corner. Petiolar node with a distinct truncate dorsal surface. Cinctus on A4 present, mild.
All complete specimens from the type series of Z. ferox were originally syninclusions in the same piece of amber (Perrichot, 2014). After treatment of the original piece, the holotype (JWJ-Bu18a in Perrichot, 2014, ANTWEB1008126-JWJ-hym18a on AntWeb webpage) and one paratype (JWJ-Bu18b in Perrichot, 2014, ANTWEB1008128-JWJ-hym-18b on AntWeb webpage) are still together in the same amber piece, while another paratype (JWJ-Bu17 in Perrichot, 2014, ANTWEB1008127-JWJ-hym17 on Antweb webpage) is included in another piece. Curiously, at first look, the three specimens differ enough to raise suspicion about their conspecificity; however, that is just an impression, as their differences are almost certainly a result of the preservation. The holotype has a low bump on the dorsal mesosomal outline, at about the level of the metanotum or anterior portion of the propodeum (Fig. 11, A), as opposed to a continuous dorsal outline as seen in the paratypes, and its cuticle, especially on the head, looks overall a bit desiccated. Paratype ANTWEB1008128 differs from the holotype and the other paratype by having an acute apex of the petiolar node that barely forms a dorsal margin (Fig. 11, B), as opposed to a truncate top of the node, forming a clear dorsal margin in profile (Fig. 11, D and E). It also differs by the shape of the anterior surface of the A3 tergite (first gastral tergite), which is concave and projecting over the helcium, as opposed to a flat to slightly convex anterior surface. Paratype ANTWEB1008127 appears to have the best preservation among the type series, with only a small detachment of the metasoma between A3 and A4. These differences between the types are here interpreted as taphonomic effects. The mesosomal bump in the holotype is assumed to be an artifact, the true state for the species being the shape seen in the paratypes. The cinctus on A4, initially interpreted as possibly the result of poor preservation (Perrichot, 2014), is here interpreted as a true feature of Z. ferox, since it is seen in the three complete specimens (although apparently weak in ANTWEB1008128), but especially because in paratype ANTWEB1008127, which has A3 disarticulating from A4, the formation of a distinct pretergite on A4, a typical result of cinctus formation in ants, is observed (Fig. 11, F). All that considered, as well as the diagnoses of the new species, Z. ferox can be differentiated from any other species in the genus by its new diagnosis presented above. The variation observed in the species treated in Cao et al. (2020b) is commented below, with some of the specimens studied in that work here considered as belonging to different species.
Keys including this Species
Distribution
This taxon was described from Burmese amber, Kachin State, Myanmar (Early Cenomanian, Late Cretaceous).
Castes
Nomenclature
The following information is derived from Barry Bolton's Online Catalogue of the Ants of the World.
- †ferox. †Zigrasimecia ferox Perrichot, 2014: 166, figs. 1-10 (w.) MYANMAR (Burmese amber).
Description
References
- Barden, P. 2017. Fossil ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae): ancient diversity and the rise of modern lineages. Myrmecological News 24: 1-30.
- Boudinot, B.E., Perrichot, V., Chaul, J.C.M. 2020. †Camelosphecia gen. nov., lost ant-wasp intermediates from the mid-Cretaceous (Hymenoptera, Formicoidea). ZooKeys 1005, 21–55 (doi:10.3897/zookeys.1005.57629).
- Cao, H., Boudinot, B.E., Shih, C., Ren, D., Gao, T. 2020. Cretaceous ants shed new light on the origins of worker polymorphism. Science China Life Science 63, 1-4 (doi:10.1007/s11427-019-1617-4).
- Chaul, J.C.M. 2023. A revision of the Cretaceous ant genus Zigrasimecia Barden & Grimaldi, 2013 (Hymenoptera: Formicidae: †Zigrasimeciinae). Zootaxa 5325(3), 301–341 (doi:10.11646/zootaxa.5325.3.1).
- Perfilieva, K.S. 2023. Cretaceous-Burmese-amber ants: Morphological features and community structure. Biology Bulletin Reviews 131, 38–54 (doi:10.1134/s207908642301005x).
- Perrichot, V. 2014. A new species of the Cretaceous ant Zigrasimecia based on the worker caste reveals placement of the genus in the Sphecomyrminae (Hymenoptera: Formicidae). Myrmecological News 19, 165-169.
- Zhuang, Y., Liu, Y., Ran, H., Jarzembowski, E. A., Zhang, Q. 2023. A new species and one new wing type of the iron maiden ants from Kachin amber (Hymenoptera: Formicidae: Zigrasimecia). Cretaceous Research 154, 105742 (doi:10.1016/j.cretres.2023.105742).
- Zhuang, Y., Ran, H., Li, X., Feng, C., Liu, Y. 2021. A new species of the iron maiden ant based on an alate female from mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber (Hymenoptera: Formicidae: †Zigrasimecia). Cretaceous Research 130, 105056 (doi:10.1016/j.cretres.2021.105056).