Found lurking in amber P. Barden & D. A. Grimaldi
A newly discovered species of prehistoric 鈥渉ell ant鈥 had anatomy that lived up to its demonic name, including a lethal feeding apparatus reinforced with metal.
Hell ants are an extinct lineage from the Cretaceous Period. Instead of regular mouthparts, they had upward-facing blades.
No living species have such facial anatomy. However, the hairs around hell ants鈥 mouths are reminiscent of hairs on modern trap-jaw ants that cause their mouths to snap shut when triggered. This has led to speculation that the hell ants鈥 mouthparts worked in a similar way.
Advertisement
Some also had a horn-like appendage that jutted out over their tusk-like mandibles. This includes the new species, Linguamyrmex vladi, which at the New Jersey Institute of Technology in Newark and his colleagues found preserved in 98-million-year-old amber.
Springing the trap
It may be that when another insect brushed the trigger hairs, the blade-like mandibles flipped up and impaled the prey against the horn, punching through its outer layer. 鈥淵ou have this sort of stopping plate, made to accommodate the mandibles closing and capturing prey,鈥 says Barden.
That鈥檚 not all. CT scans revealed that L. vladi鈥檚 horn was reinforced with metal.
鈥淧robably the metal helps to keep the horn undamaged,鈥 says at the University of Rennes 1 in France. In 2016, he of another horned hell ant, which he called a 鈥渦nicorn ant鈥.
鈥淚t makes sense to reinforce that [appendage],鈥 agrees Barden, since the horn must have had to withstand repeated impacts from the mandibles. Some modern insects reduce wear and tear in a similar way, by .
Metal vampires
As well as being a metal-reinforced unicorn, L. vladi may have been a vampire. When their mandibles moved upwards, they formed a 鈥済utter鈥. 鈥淭hat might be something that developed to funnel haemolymph 鈥 insect blood 鈥 down through the mouthparts,鈥 says Barden.
Next to the ant, Barden鈥檚 team found a preserved beetle grub 鈥 exactly the kind of 鈥渟quishy, haemolymph-laden insect鈥 that could support a vampiric lifestyle. Perhaps it was next on the menu.
But the metal-reinforced horn suggests that the ants鈥 jaws moved with enough power to penetrate the tougher cuticles of adult insects as well.
鈥淯ntil we find a specimen with the prey item trapped, which is probably a matter of time, we鈥檙e left to speculate,鈥 says Barden. However, the Myanmar amber deposits where he found his specimen are so rich that more detailed observations are likely to emerge.
Journal reference: Systematic Entomology, DOI:
Topics:



