The University of Utah biologist who identified the insects named about a third of them after ancient Mayan lords and demons.
These new ant species are the stuff of nightmares when viewed under a microscope, according to entomologist Jack Longino, a professor of biology.
"Their faces are broad shields, the eyes reduced to tiny points at the edges and the fierce jaws bristling with sharp teeth," Longino said.
In a study published in the journal Zootaxa, Longino identified and named 14 new species of the ant genus Eurhopalothrix and distinguished them from 14 other previously known species.
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The genus name means "eight swellings" for the ants' eight-segmented antennas.
"The new species were found mostly in small patches of forest that remain in a largely agricultural landscape, highlighting the importance of forest conservation efforts in Central America," Longino said.
The new ant species are less than one-twelfth to one-twenty-fifth of an inch long - much smaller than a rice grain or common half-inch-long household ants - and live in the rotting wood and dead leaves that litter the forest floors in Central America.
No one knows how they find their prey, presumed to be soft-bodied insects, spiders, millipedes and centipedes. But the ants are known to coat themselves with a thin layer of clay, believed to serve as camouflage.
Among the newly discovered species from forest-floor leaf litter, Eurhopalothrix zipacna was named for a violent, crocodile-like Mayan demon.
Eurhopalothrix xibalba, or a "place of fear," was named for the underworld ruled by death gods in certain Mayan mythology. Eurhopalothrix hunhau was named for a major Mayan death god and a lord of the underworld.