Linguamyrmex is known from a total of four adult fossils. The
holotype is specimen number "AMNH BuPH-01" from the American Museum of Natural History; the other three specimens described are also in the same collection, but were not placed as members of
L. vladi. The described specimens are of
worker caste adults which have been preserved as
inclusions in transparent chunks of
Burmese amber. The
amber specimens were recovered from deposits in
Kachin State, in Myanmar. Burmese amber has been
radiometrically dated using
U-
Pb isotopes, yielding an age of approximately 98.79 ± 0.62 million years old, close to the
Albian –
Cenomanian boundary, in the earliest Cenomanian. The fossils were first studied by paleoentomologists Phillip Barden and David Grimaldi with their 2017
type description of the new genus and species being published in the journal
Systematic Entomology. The genus name
Linguamyrmex was formed as a combination of the
Greek "myrmex" which means ant, and the
Latin "lingua", which means tongue, as a reference to the shape and appearance of the clypeal projection. The
specific epithet vladi is a patronym honoring Vlad III, known as
Vlad the Impaler, who was the ruler of
Wallachia. It was coined as a reference to both Vlad's preferred execution style and for his inspiration of
Bram Stoker's
Count Dracula, who drank blood. The three remaining workers studied, BuPH-02, BuPH-03, and BuPH-04 were assigned to
Linguamyrmex due to several factors. Each of the specimens is incomplete, all missing portions of the antennae, making comparison of the scape length to the other segments impossible, and all specimens are missing the terminal segments of the gaster. Based on the worker size and on paddle composition Barden and Grimaldi suggest the three workers may belong to undescribed species.
Linguamyrmex is one of several ant genera described from Burmese amber, the others being
Burmomyrma,
Camelomecia,
Ceratomyrmex,
Gerontoformica,
Haidomyrmex,
Myanmyrma, and
Zigrasimecia.
Linguamyrmex is one of five genera in Haidomyrmecini, the other four being
Ceratomyrmex,
Haidomyrmex,
Haidomyrmodes and
Haidoterminus. The genus is distinguished from them by the well developed gasteral constriction on the abdomen, a feature only seen, to a lesser degree, in
Haidomyrmodes mammuthus. Additionally
Linguamyrmex has an enlarged and paddle shaped
clypeus, similar to the extremely modified clypeus of
Ceratomyrmex, but which is smooth along the stalk instead of sporting setae, and with trigger hairs placed at the base of the setae pad on the paddle instead of at the base of the paddle stalk. ==Behavior and ecology==