Formicoidea Latreille, 1809, 1866

Boudinot, Brendon E., Perrichot, Vincent & Chaul, Julio C. M., 2020, † Camelosphecia gen. nov., lost ant-wasp intermediates from the mid-Cretaceous (Hymenoptera, Formicoidea), ZooKeys 1005, pp. 21-55 : 21

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1005.57629

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B9954463-1D57-46C3-AB90-751157C9D0B5

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https://treatment.plazi.org/id/ED4248E9-AD77-5762-AFDC-2F714D780049

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scientific name

Formicoidea Latreille, 1809
status

 

Formicoidea Latreille, 1809

Definition.

Detailed study of the † Camelomecia clade has redefined the Formicoidea and refined our understanding of the definition and evolutionary patterning of the total and crown Formicidae ( Boudinot et al. 2020a). Formicoids, we now know, are a clade of Formicapoidina (sister to Apoidea : Johnson et al. 2013; Branstetter et al. 2017; Peters et al. 2017) defined by positive (i.e., non- “absence” character) morphological synapomorphies most of which form an innovation suite for cursorial or surface-based predation, including: (1) prognathy and elongation of the postgenal bridge (Figs 13A View Figure 13 , 14B View Figure 14 ); (2) enlargement of the dorsal (cranial) mandibular condyle (Fig. 13A View Figure 13 ); (3) rotation of the antennal toruli laterad in females (Fig. 13A, B View Figure 13 ); (4) elongation of the procoxae (Figs 14A View Figure 14 , 15A View Figure 15 ); (5) partial to complete enclosure of the proximal protrochanteral articulations within the distal procoxal foramina (Figs 14E View Figure 14 , 15A View Figure 15 , 16E View Figure 16 ); (6) internalization of the proximal meso- and metacoxal articulations within the mesosoma (Figs 14B View Figure 14 , 15A View Figure 15 , 16 View Figure 16 ); (7) petiolation of the first metasomal segment (Figs 14A View Figure 14 , 15A View Figure 15 , 16A, D, E View Figure 16 ); (8) gain of the anteroventral process of the petiolar sternum (Fig. 16A View Figure 16 ); (9) buttressing of the metasomal waist through gain of the prora (an anteroventral process of the second metasomal sternum) (Figs 15A View Figure 15 , 16A, D View Figure 16 ); plus (10) an angled juncture between the first free abscissae of Rs and M in the fore wing (Figs 15A View Figure 15 , 16A, D View Figure 16 ). The † Camelomecia clade, in contrast to the total clade of the Formicidae , probably lack the metapleural gland and apterous workers altogether, while also being defined by a combination of derived and plesiomorphic features (see, e.g., the key below). Based on direct examination of the unique specimen (holotype) of † Camelomecia janovitzi (BEB at the AMNH, 2017), presence of this gland is uncertain and requires further scrutiny.