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"Long
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April 28, 2009
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“Relic” ant said to hail from lost past
Sept. 16, 2008
Courtesy University of Texas at Austin
and World Science staff
A bizarre predatory, blind, underground
ant species discovered in the Amazon rainforest is probably descended almost straight from the first ants, researchers say.
The insect was unearthed by evolutionary biologist Christian Rabeling of the University of Texas at Austin, according to scientists.
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Martialis heureka
(Courtesy C. Rabeling, U. Texas at Austin)
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The ant is named Martialis heureka, which translates roughly to “ant from Mars,” because
of its never-before-recorded combination of traits. It lives in soil, is two to three millimeters long, pale, and has no eyes and large jaws.
Scientists have classified the creature in its own new subfamily, one of 21 ant subfamilies. This is the first time that a new subfamily of ants with living
members has been discovered since 1923, according to the investigators.
“This discovery hints at a wealth of species, possibly of great evolutionary importance, still hidden in the soils of the remaining rainforests,”
write Rabeling and co-authors in a paper reporting the finding
this week in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Rabeling collected what is said to be the only known specimen of the ant species in 2003 from leaf-litter at the Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuária in Manaus, Brazil. He and his colleagues found that the ant was a new species, genus and subfamily after structural and genetic analysis. Analysis of DNA from the ant’s legs confirmed its position at the very base of the ant evolutionary tree, the researchers said.
Ants are believed to have evolved over 120 million years ago from wasp ancestors. It’s thought that they evolved quickly into many different lineages, with ants specializing to
live in soil, leaf-litter or trees, or becoming generalists. “This discovery lends support to the idea that blind subterranean predator ants arose at the dawn of ant evolution,” said Rabeling.
Rabeling doesn’t suggest that the ancestor to all ants was
this way, but that these adaptations arose early and have persisted. “Based on our data and the fossil record, we assume that the ancestor of this ant was somewhat wasp-like, perhaps similar to the Cretaceous amber fossil
Sphecomyrma, which is widely known as the evolutionary missing link between wasps and ants,” said Rabeling.
He speculated that the new ant species evolved adaptations over time to its
underground habitat—for example, loss of eyes and pale color—while retaining some of its ancestors’ characteristics.
“The new ant species is hidden in environmentally stable tropical soils with potentially less competition from other ants and in a relatively stable microclimate,” he said. “It could represent a ‘relict’ species.”
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A bizarre underground, predatory, blind ant species discovered in the Amazon rainforest is probably descended almost straight from the first ants, researchers say.
The insect was unearthed by evolutionary biologist Christian Rabeling of the University of Texas at Austin, according to scientists.
The new ant is named Martialis heureka, which translates roughly to “ant from Mars,” because the ant has a combination of traits never before recorded. It lives in soil, is two to three millimeters long, pale, and has no eyes and large jaws.
The ant also belongs to its own new subfamily, one of 21 ant subfamilies. This is the first time that a new subfamily of ants with living species has been discovered since 1923, according to the investigators.
“This discovery hints at a wealth of species, possibly of great evolutionary importance, still hidden in the soils of the remaining rainforests,” writes Rabeling and co-authors in a paper reporting their discovery this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Rabeling collected what is said to be the only known specimen of the ant species in 2003 from leaf-litter at the Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuária in Manaus, Brazil. He and his colleagues found that the ant was a new species, genus and subfamily after structural and genetic analysis. Analysis of DNA from the ant’s legs confirmed its position at the very base of the ant evolutionary tree, the researchers said.
Ants are believed to have evolved over 120 million years ago from wasp ancestors. It’s thought that they evolved quickly into many different lineages, with ants specializing to lives in the soil, leaf-litter or trees, or becoming generalists. “This discovery lends support to the idea that blind subterranean predator ants arose at the dawn of ant evolution,” said Rabeling.
Rabeling doesn’t suggest that the ancestor to all ants was blind and subterranean, but that these adaptations arose early and have persisted over the years. “Based on our data and the fossil record, we assume that the ancestor of this ant was somewhat wasp-like, perhaps similar to the Cretaceous amber fossil Sphecomyrma, which is widely known as the evolutionary missing link between wasps and ants,” said Rabeling.
He speculated that the new ant species evolved adaptations over time to its subterranean habitat—for example, loss of eyes and pale color—while retaining some of its ancestor’s physical characteristics.
“The new ant species is hidden in environmentally stable tropical soils with potentially less competition from other ants and in a relatively stable microclimate,” he said. “It could represent a ‘relict’ species that retained some ancestral morphological [structural] characteristics.”
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