Unicorn Ant From The Cretaceous

One Of The Earliest Specialist Trap Jaw Ants ...

The accumulation of small heritable changes within populations over time.

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Unicorn Ant From The Cretaceous

#1  Postby Calilasseia » Jun 02, 2016 2:06 am

Here's an ant to be reckoned with ... a 99 million year old species that was not only equipped as a predator capable of taking on large insect prey, but which also had a unicorn-like protrusion on its head. Courtesy of this article in Science, we learn that this species, found in 99 million year old amber in Myanmar, was one of the earliest trap-jaw ants to emerge once specialisation appeared in ant lineages.

The scientific paper (sadly paywalled) is this one:

Extreme Morphogenesis And Ecological Specialization Among Cretaceous Basal Ants by Vincent Perrichot, Bo Wang and Michael S. Engel, Current Biology, DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2016.03.075

Perrichot et al, 2016 wrote:Highlights

•A unicorn ant with oversized mandibles is described from Cretaceous amber of Myanmar
•The exaggerated head structures composed a highly specialized trap for large prey
•Haidomyrmecine ants were probably solitary specialist predators
•Some basal lineages had a refined ecology shortly following the advent of ants

Summary

Ants comprise one lineage of the triumvirate of eusocial insects and experienced their early diversification within the Cretaceous [ 1–9 ]. Their ecological success is generally attributed to their remarkable social behavior. Not all ants cooperate in social hunting, however, and some of the most effective predatory ants are solitary hunters with powerful trap jaws [ 10 ]. Recent evolutionary studies predict that the early branching lineages of extant ants formed small colonies of ground-dwelling, solitary specialist predators [ 2, 5, 7, 11, 12 ], while some Cretaceous fossils suggest group recruitment and socially advanced behavior among stem-group ants [ 9 ]. We describe a trap-jaw ant from 99 million-year-old Burmese amber with head structures that presumably functioned as a highly specialized trap for large-bodied prey. These are a cephalic horn resulting from an extreme modification of the clypeus hitherto unseen among living and extinct ants and scythe-like mandibles that extend high above the head, both demonstrating the presence of exaggerated morphogenesis early among stem-group ants. The new ant belongs to the Haidomyrmecini, possibly the earliest ant lineage [ 9 ], and together these trap-jaw ants suggest that at least some of the earliest Formicidae were solitary specialist predators. With their peculiar adaptations, haidomyrmecines had a refined ecology shortly following the advent of ants.
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Re: Unicorn Ant From The Cretaceous

#2  Postby tuco » Jun 02, 2016 3:18 am

Any idea how big is this ant and what kind of prey could it hypothetically catch? Interestingly enough the linked vid " spark the jaw to rapidly shut around their prey" shows how trap jaw ant uses jaws to escape. I was just curious what is meant by "large prey".
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