Archimylacris (meaning "primitive Mylacris", in reference to another species of Carboniferous cockroach)[clarification needed] is an extinct genus of cockroach-like blattopterans, a group of insects ancestral to cockroaches, mantids, and termites.
Archimylacris Temporal range: Carboniferous,
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Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Class: | Insecta |
Order: | †Blattoptera |
Family: | †Archimylacridae |
Subfamily: | †Archimylacrinae |
Genus: | †Archimylacris Scudder, 1868 |
Type species | |
Archimylacris acadica Scudder, 1868
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Other species | |
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Archimylacris lived on the warm, swampy forest floors of North America and Europe 300 million years ago, in the Late Carboniferous times. Like modern cockroaches, this insect had a large head shield with long, curved antennae, or feelers, and folded wings. To a modern observer, it would likely appear as a moderate-sized cockroach, with a "tail" (ovipositor) in the female. Presumably, its habits would be cockroach-like, too, scurrying along the undergrowth eating anything edible, possibly falling prey to labyrinthodont amphibians and very early reptiles. The average length of Archimylacris species was 2–3 cm.[1]
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