Thursday, April 17, 2025

[PaleoEntomology • 2025] Basiceros enana • A Fossil-informed pattern of Body Size increase and local extinction in Basiceros dirt ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae)

 

 Basiceros enana
Fiorentino, Probst, Richter, Economo & Barden, 2025
 

Abstract
Basiceros dirt ants are morphologically distinct and widely distributed members of Neotropical communities. These ants possess features that aid in leaf litter camouflage and are larger than other closely related lineages with similar cryptic adaptations. Here, we report the first fossil of this genus group, Basiceros enana sp. nov., from Miocene-aged Dominican amber, which reveals a pattern of body size evolution and disjunct biogeography. The fossil evidences the local extinction of Basiceros in the Caribbean, even as living Basiceros are known from Honduras to Southern Brazil. Using combined morphological and molecular datasets of all closely related lineages, we recover the evolutionary trajectory for body size within the group, demonstrating that body size was initially small in these ants and followed by a rapid expansion of body size in the common ancestor of all living species. Results reflect the capacity for early morphological evolution to influence perceived patterns of body size increase through a mosaic of ancestral legacy and continuous enlargement.

Keywords: fossil, local extinction, ancestral state reconstruction, Caribbean evolution, body size 

Artistic rendition of Basiceros enana preserved in Dominican amber from CT-scan data. Specialized hairs used for picking up dirt can be seen highlighted in yellow covering the ants' legs and head.
Credit: Gianpiero Fiorentino (NJIT)

Basiceros enana sp. nov. 


Gianpiero Fiorentino, Rodolfo Probst, Adrian Richter, Evan P. Economo and Phillip Barden. 2025. A Fossil-informed pattern of Body Size increase and local extinction in Basiceros dirt ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae). Proc. R. Soc. B. 292; 20242171. DOI: doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2024.2171 [16 April 2025]