Dorylinae is an ant subfamily, with distributions in both the Old World and New World. Brady et al. (2014) synonymized the previous dorylomorph subfamilies (Aenictinae, Aenictogitoninae, Cerapachyinae, Ecitoninae, and Leptanilloidinae) under Dorylinae, while Borowiec (2016) reviewed and revised the genera, resurrecting many genera which had previously been merged. Dorylinae genera are suggested to have evolved sometime between , subsequently undergoing rapid adaptive radiation events during their early history. Dorylinae ants including Eciton species, exhibit army ant behavior. Non-army Doryline ants like Yunodorylus provides evolution of the army ant adaptive syndrome, including group foraging, nomadism, and specialized queens.
==Genera== Acanthostichus Mayr, 1887 Aenictogiton Emery, 1901 Aenictus Shuckard, 1840 Cerapachys Smith, 1857 Cheliomyrmex Mayr, 1870 Chrysapace Crawley, 1924 Cylindromyrmex Mayr, 1870 Dorylus Fabricius, 1793 Eburopone Borowiec, 2016 Eciton Latreille, 1804 Eusphinctus Emery, 1893 Labidus Jurine, 1807 Leptanilloides Mann, 1923 Lioponera Mayr, 1879 Lividopone Bolton & Fisher, 2016 Neivamyrmex Borgmeier, 1940 Neocerapachys Borowiec, 2016 Nomamyrmex Borgmeier, 1936 Ooceraea Roger, 1862 Parasyscia Emery, 1882 †Procerapachys Wheeler, 1915 Simopone Forel, 1891 Sphinctomyrmex Mayr, 1866 Syscia Roger, 1861 Tanipone Bolton & Fisher, 2012 Vicinopone Bolton & Fisher, 2012 Yunodorylus Xu, 2000 Zasphinctus Wheeler, 1918
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).