Pristomyrmex archaios

Distribution
This taxon was described from.

Nomenclature

 * † archaios.  †Pristomyrmex archaios Radchenko & Dlussky, 2018: 253, fig. 3 (m.) BITTERFELD AMBER.

Male
holotype: HL 0.59, HW 0.52, SL 0.16, OL 0.33, PL 0.37, PH 0.29, PPL 0.19, PPH 0.19, PPW 0.27, HTL 0.61, ScW 0.67, ScL 0.93; paratype: HW 0.51, SL 0.16, OL 0.32, ML 1.23, MH 0.88, ScW 0.67, ScL 0.91, HTL 0.64. Ratios: holotype: HL/HW 1.13, SL/HL 0.27, SL/HW 0.31, OL/HL 0.57, PL/PH 1.27, PL/HL 0.64, PPL/PPH 0.78, PPL/HL 0.32, ScL/ScW 1.40; paratype: SL/HW 0.32, ML/MH 1.39, ScL/ScW 1.36.

Total length: ca. 3.5 mm. Head slightly longer than width, gradually rounded above eyes. Eyes very big, their maximum diameter more than half of head length, genae very short; ocelli very big. Anterior clypeal margin straight, without notch or dents. Antennae 12-segmented, without club, scape short, somewhat shorter than second funicular segment; 2nd to 9th funicular segments subequal in length, terminal one the longest. Mandibles strongly reduced, vestigial, look like short triangles. Palp formula 5, 3.

Mesosoma relatively short and high, ca. 1.4 times longer than height, scutum convex, Mayrian furrows well developed, deep, Y-shaped; scutum not wide (seen from above). Propodeum rounded, without tubercles, its dorsal surface somewhat shorter than posterior one. Propodeal lobes widely rounded. Petiole with distinct peduncle, but not very long, its anterior surface somewhat concave, node narrowly rounded, subconical; postpetiole somewhat longer than height, with rounded dorsum. Forewing with closed cells 1r+2r and mcu, cell 3 r open.

Middle and hind tibiae with barbulate spur, pretarsal claws simple.

Whole body with fine superficial micropunctures, appears dull. Head, mesosoma and waist with both long and short suberect hairs, without decumbent pubescence. All antennal segments with very dense, short subdecumbent pubescence.

Type Material
Holotype and paratype in the same piece of amber, males, GZG.BST (Geowissenschaftlicher Zentrum der Ge org-August-Universitat Göttingen, Germany) No. 27.041, Bitterfeld amber, Late Eocene, Germany.

Etymology
The species is named after Greek word αρχαίος – ancient, to stress more primitive character of the forewing venation compare to modern species.