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Fossil find extends ants' ancient lineage.


When David A. Grimaldi, an entomologist at the American Museum of Natural History American Museum of Natural History, incorporated in New York City in 1869 to promote the study of natural science and related subjects. Buildings on its present site were opened in 1877.  in New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
, gazed into a 92-million -year-old piece of amber that had been donated to the museum about 6 months before, he saw something rather unexpected. "But I knew exactly what it was," he adds.

It was the fossil of a primitive ant. The surprise is that the species of ant must be 40 million years older than any others of its subfamily subfamily /sub·fam·i·ly/ (sub´fam-i-le) a taxonomic division between a family and a tribe.

sub·fam·i·ly
n.
A taxonomic category ranking between a family and a genus.
, Grimaldi and his museum colleague Donat Agosti report in the Nov. 14 online PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY Or SCIENCES. The finding forces researchers to reevaluate their ideas about the early evolution of these tiny insects.

Grimaldi says the fossil has many features that suggest the female ant was a working member of a social colony. First, the insect has a large gaster gaster /gas·ter/ (gas´ter) [Gr.] stomach.

gas·ter
n.
The stomach.



gaster

[Gr.] see stomach.
, or abdomen and lower thorax thorax, body division found in certain animals. In humans and other mammals it lies between the neck and abdomen and is also called the chest. The skeletal frame of the thorax is formed by the sternum (breastbone) and ribs in front and the dorsal vertebrae in back. , a defining feature of such ants. Second, it has a metapleural gland, which secretes a chemical that identifies social ants to others in their colony. Finally, it sported no wings, so the ant wasn't a queen.

A gland at the end of its abdomen identifies the amber-entombed insect as a formicine ant, so called because it can defend itself by squirting formic acid formic acid or methanoic acid (mĕth'ənō`ĭk), HCO2H, a colorless, corrosive liquid with a sharp odor; it boils at 100.7°C; and solidifies at 8.4°C;. . Other formicine ants include wood ants, carpenter ants, and the almost ubiquitous species that Grimaldi terms sidewalk ants. Formicine ants are "amazingly adaptable," he says. "That's what makes them so successful."

Today, there are more than 9,500 known living species of formicine ants, and there are probably between 3,000 and 9,000 others yet to be discovered, says Ted R. Schultz, a research entomologist for the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History For the museum in Manhattan, see .

This article is about the museum in Washington, D.C.. For other uses, see National Museum of Natural History (disambiguation).

The National Museum of Natural History
 in Washington, D.C.

The fossil record shows that ants were rare--and anatomically quite primitive--until their explosion of evolutionary success about 45 million years ago. But today, they dominate, Grimaldi notes. Ants are leading predators of invertebrates in many ecosystems, and in the tropics tropics, also called tropical zone or torrid zone, all the land and water of the earth situated between the Tropic of Cancer at lat. 23 1-2°N and the Tropic of Capricorn at lat. 23 1-2°S.  of the Western Hemisphere, they are leading herbivores as well. Up to 15 percent of the fresh vegetation there is carried off by leaf-cutter ants, Schultz says.

Worldwide, 15 to 20 percent of the total weight of all land animals comes from ants, Schultz notes. In the tropics, it's 25 percent or more. Grimaldi agrees: "In the tropical lowlands, ants rule."

The new fossil joins previously discovered early specimens of two other large, modern subfamilies of ants. Therefore, the lineages for most types of modern ants were already in place at least 90 million years ago. This has profound implications for ant evolution, says Grimaldi.

Formicine ants actually are stingless wasps, he says, and their earliest ancestors couldn't have arisen before about 110 million years ago, when wasps first appeared. The discovery in the amber indicates that the diversification of ants took place over a much shorter time--only 20 million years--compared with the 70 million years that entomologists The following is a list of entomologists, people who have studied insects.
Name Born Died Country Speciality
John Abbot 1751 1840 United States
 had previously presumed.

The finding also intensifies the mystery of why it took so long for ants to evolve their dominant role in so many ecosystems, including picnics. All the ingredients for success were apparently in place. The ancient species had a social structure, the climate was quite warm, and the ants' ecological niche wasn't occupied by other species, Grimaldi says.

"All of their ecological opportunities were already available [92 million years ago]," he notes. "We simply don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
 what's responsible for their present-day success."
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Author:Perkins, S.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Nov 25, 2000
Words:569
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