Caputoraptor

Extinct genus of insects From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Caputoraptor is an extinct genus of insect from the Cretaceous period of Southeast Asia and East Asia. The genus contains two species from the Burmese amber (Cenomanian) of Myanmar, the type species C. elegans and the second species C. vidit, and one species from the Jinju Formation (Albian) of South Korea, C. ganggu.[1] It is part of the extinct order Alienoptera. C. elegans is notable for the presence of a scissor like mechanism consisting of a straight edge on the back of the head and corresponding serrated edges on the first thoracic segment, these were initially suggested to be used by the female to grasp the male during mating, but the structure is not sexually dimorphic, so a use to hold prey was subsequently suggested.[2] Its morphology suggests a predatory habit inhabiting shrubs and trees.[3] In 2020 a Caputoraptor elegans nymph was described that was in the process of being predated upon by a Ceratomyrmex hell ant.[4]

Phylum:Arthropoda
Class:Insecta
Family:Alienopteridae
Genus:Caputoraptor
Bai et al., 2018
Quick facts Scientific classification, Type species ...
Caputoraptor
Temporal range: AlbianCenomanian
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Family: Alienopteridae
Genus: Caputoraptor
Bai et al., 2018
Type species
Caputoraptor elegans
Bai et al., 2018
Other species
  • C. vidit
    Šmídová, Vršanský & Wang in Vršanský et al. (2018)
  • C. ganggu Vršanský et al., 2025
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