Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
This genus is also clearly not a member of the other myrmicine tribes as presented or proposed in Bolton (2003).
Two new genera of myrmicine ants from Brazil"."
The combination of traits differentiates this thus far monotypic genus from any other myrmicine.
Ancyridris is a small genus of myrmicine ants.
Pogonomyrmecini is a tribe of myrmicine ants with 2 extant genera, recently formed in 2015.
Solenopsidini (meaning "pipe-faced") is a tribe of myrmicine ants with about 20 genera.
It is one of the largest myrmicine genera with more than 174 species distributed worldwide in the tropics and the Afrotropical region.
Solenopsis fugax is a myrmicine ant of the genus Solenopsis.
The spider mimics the 2.6 mm long myrmicine ant Monomorium croceiventre, which lives in the same habitat.
Crematogastrini is a tribe of myrmicine ants with 64 genera and 8 fossil genera.
Tatuidris was first described in 1968 and initially placed in the myrmicine tribe Agroecomyrmecini, together with two fossil genera.
Meranoplus is a unique and charismatic myrmicine genus of hairy, slow-moving, and armored ants.
L. acervorum are small myrmicine ants with distinct propodeal spines and have three-segmented antennal clubs.
Most myrmicine genera possess well-developed eyes and frontal lobes that partly conceal the antennal insertions.
Fernández was unable to place the new genus in any existing myrmicine tribe although several potential candidates were considered including the Adelomyrmecini and Solenopsidini.
The Pogonomyrmex maricopa, found in Western USA, are bright red myrmicine ants whose venom is the most potent of any ant species.
The small myrmicine ant Leptothorax cf. canadensis is one of the most common ants in boreal coniferous forests in eastern North America.
The Myrmicine ant genus Allomerus Mayr (Hymenoptera:Formicidae)" Article "
Afrotropical species of the myrmicine ant genera Cardiocondyla, Leptothorax, Melissotarsus, Messor and Cataulacus.
Thus in some cloud forests Adelomyrmex make up a large proportion of the ant biomass (often sharing that role with another dominant cloud forest myrmicine genus, Stenamma).
As with some other myrmicine ant genera recently described (Tyrannomyrmex, Dolopomyrmex, Tropidomyrmex), Diaphoromyrma is difficult to relate to any of the tribal taxa defined by Bolton (2003).
Six of the paratypes are in the same amber specimen as a spider, a mite, and a myrmicine ant, while the two juvenile paratypes are in a single amber also.
Messor is a myrmicine genus of ants with more than 100 species, all of which are harvester ants; the generic name comes from the Roman god of crops and harvest, Messor.
The color pattern (dark brown anterior, light, yellow brown posterior) of both is quite rare in ants, although two other myrmicine ants from the same area of rain forest (Xiphomyrma tenuicrius and Lordomyrma sp.)
Due to morphological similarities, they considered it a very primitive ant and placed it in what was then a myrmicine tribe, the Agroecomyrmecini, together with ants known from Early Eocene Baltic amber (Agroecomyrmex) and late Eocene Florissant shale (Eulithomyrmex).