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Abstract BackgroundPonerine ants are almost exclusively predatory and comprise many of the largest known ant species. Within this clade, the genusNeoponerais among the most conspicuous Neotropical predators. We describe the first fossil member of this lineage: a worker preserved in Miocene-age Dominican amber from Hispaniola. ResultsNeoponera vejestoriasp. nov. demonstrates a clear case of local extinction—there are no known extantNeoponeraspecies in the Greater Antilles. The species is attributable to an extant and well-defined species group in the genus, which suggests the group is older than previously estimated. Through CT scan reconstruction and linear morphometrics, we reconstruct the morphospace of extant and fossil ants to evaluate the history and evolution of predatory taxa in this island system. ConclusionsThe fossil attests to a shift in insular ecological community structure since the Miocene. The largest predatory taxa have undergone extinction on the island, but their extant relatives persist throughout the Neotropics.Neoponera vejestoriasp. nov. is larger than all other predatory ant workers known from Hispaniola, extant or extinct. Our results empirically demonstrate the loss of a functional niche associated with body size, which is a trait long hypothesized to be related to extinction risk.more » « less
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Sawh, Indira; Bae, Eunice; Camilo, Luciana; Lanan, Michele; Lucky, Andrea; Morais Menezes, Henrique; Fiorentino, Gianpiero; Sosiak, Christine; Khadempour, Lily; Barden, Phillip (, Myrmecological news)Worker specialization extends the behavioral and ecological repertoire of ant colonies. Specialization may relate to colony defense, brood care, foraging, and, in some taxa, storage. Replete workers swell the crop and gaster to store liquid food, which can be accessed by other colony members through trophallaxis. This storage ability, known as repletism, has in- dependently evolved across several ant lineages, but the temporal history of this trait has not yet been investigated. Here, we describe the first fossil replete in the extinct species Leptomyrmex neotropicus Baroni Urbani, 1980 preserved in Miocene-age Dominican amber. Together with new evidence of repletism in L. neotropicus’ extant sister species, Lep- tomyrmex relictus Boudinot & al., 2016, we reconstruct the pattern of acquisition and descent in this storage-linked trait. Our ancestral-state reconstruction suggests that Leptomyrmex acquired replete workers in the Eocene and may therefore represent the earliest instance of so-called “honeypot” ants among all known ants, both living and extinct.more » « less
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