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・ Myrmidon-class destroyer
・ Myrmidone
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・ Myrmoborus
・ Myrmoglyphus
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・ Myrmecia picta
・ Myrmecia picticeps
・ Myrmecia piliventris
・ Myrmecia potteri
・ Myrmecia pulchra
Myrmecia pyriformis
・ Myrmecia queenslandica
・ Myrmecia regularis
・ Myrmecia rowlandi
・ Myrmecia rubicunda
・ Myrmecia rubripes
・ Myrmecia rufinodis
・ Myrmecia rugosa
・ Myrmecia simillima
・ Myrmecia subfasciata
・ Myrmecia swalei
・ Myrmecia tarsata
・ Myrmecia tepperi
・ Myrmecia testaceipes
・ Myrmecia tridentata


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Myrmecia pyriformis : ウィキペディア英語版
Myrmecia pyriformis

''Myrmecia pyriformis'', also known as the Bull Ant,〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.guinnessworldrecords.com/world-records/most-dangerous-ant )〕 is an Australian ant. ''Myrmecia pyriformis'' belongs to the ''Myrmecia'' genus, a genus known as bull ants, being the largest known ants in the world. It is abundant in many major cities of Australia, but mostly spotted in the eastern states. The species is of a similar appearance to the ''Myrmecia forficata''.
Sizes of the ''Myrmecia pyriformis'' range around 14-23 millimetres (.55 to .9 inches) long. Female workers can grow as large as 26 millimetres (1.02 inches) while males only grow to 18-20 millimetres (.7 to .8 inches) long. Mandibles and most other features are dark red. Thoraxes are sometimes blackish-brown.
''Myrmecia pryformis'' is known to survive without a queen.〔, , & 2004 "Gamergates in the Australian ant subfamily Myrmeciinae" ''Naturwissenschaften'' 91(9):432-435〕 While some species of ''Myrmecia'' possess the gamergates, the female workers of ''Myrmecia pyriformis'' are also able to reproduce. A colony of the genus was collected in 1998 without a queen, but the colony continued producing workers for the next three years.
''Guinness World Records'' listed ''Myrmecia pyriformis'' as the world's most dangerous ant.〔
==Taxonomy==
''Myrmecia pyriformis'' was first described by British entomologist Frederick Smith in his 1858 publication '' Catalogue of hymenopterous insects in the collection of the British Museum part VI'', based on a syntype worker, queen and male collected from Melbourne and the Hunter River. The specimens are currently housed in Natural History Museum in London. Smith notes that ''M. pyriformis'' is very similar in appearance to ''M. forficata'', though he comments all sexes are larger, the male is strikingly distinct and the head is more square shaped and not narrowed from the back end. Smith also described ''M. sanguinea'' from Tasmania in the same publication he described ''M. pyriformis'', now treated as a junior synonym. Prior to this, however, ''M. sanguinea'' was thought to be a synonym of ''M. vindex''. Due to its similar appearance to ''M. forficata'', Auguste Forel believed ''M. pyriformis'' was a subspecies, rather than a full species. ''M. pyriformis'' was never reassigned as a subspecies; instead, it is still regarded as a full species in the genus ''Myrmecia''.
In 1911, Carlo Emery established seven species groups, placing ''M. pyriformis'' in the ''M. forficata'' species group. This placement was long accepted until a 1991 review of the species groups was published and moved the species to the ''M. cephalotes'' species group instead. This placement, however, was short lived and the ant was placed in the ''M. gulosa'' species group one month after it was placed in the ''M. cephalotes'' species group. ''M. pyriformis'' is commonly known as the Black bull-ant, Brown bulldog ant or the Inch ant, which references the colour and notably large size of the ant.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.uniprot.org/taxonomy/229063 )

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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