Cephalotes alveolatus
Cephalotes alveolatus is an extinct species of ant in the subfamily Myrmicinae known from a single Middle Miocene fossil found in amber on Hispaniola. At the time of description C. alveolatus was one of seven fossil ant species placed in the Cephalotes ''coffeae'' clade.
History and classification
Cephalotes alveolatus was described from a single fossil ant preserved as an inclusion in a transparent chunk of Dominican amber. The amber was produced by the extinct Hymenaea protera, which formerly grew on Hispaniola, across northern South America and up to southern Mexico. The specimen was collected from an unidentified amber mine in the Dominican Republic. The amber dates from the Burdigalian stage of the Miocene being recovered from sections of the La Toca Formation in the Cordillera Septentrional and the Yanigua Formation in the Cordillera Oriental.At the time of description, the holotype specimen was preserved in the private collection of Joachim Scheven in Hagen, Germany. The fossil was first studied by researchers Gijsbertus Vierbergen and Joachim Scheven with their 1995 type description of the new species being published in the Creation Research Society quarterly. They placed the species into the genus Zacryptocerus, and coined the specific epithet alveolatus as a reference to the many small pits on the head and body of the worker.
Living and fossil species of the genera Cephalotes, Eucryptocerus, Exocryptocerus and Zacryptocerus were examined in 1999 by Maria L. De Andrade and Cesare Baroni Urbani with a redescription of the Cephalotes being published in the journal Stuttgarter Beiträge zur Naturkunde. Serie B . De Andrade and Baroni Urbani concluded that Cephalotes was paraphyletic if the species placed in the other three genera were not included within the genus. As a result, Zacryptocerus alveolatus was moved to Cephalotes as C. alveolatus. The authors examined the type specimen, then still in Scheven collection, and an additional fossil worker housed in the Staatliches Museum fiir Naturkunde and placed into the species. They noted that the holotype specimen is damaged due to burning, and as such the original coloration of the worker is unidentifiable, and the integument is partially fragmented.