Termitaradus dominicanus is an extinct species of termite bug in the family Termitaphididae known from a Miocene[1] fossil found on Hispaniola.
[2][3] Termitaradus dominicanus is known from a single fossil insect which is an inclusion in a transparent chunk of Dominican amber 13 by 10 by 5 millimetres (0.51 by 0.39 by 0.20 in) in size.
The holotype fossil is composed of a complete adult individual that was collected from an unidentified amber mine between Puerto Plata and Santiago de los Caballeros.
[2] The holotype was first studied by paleoentomologists George Poinar Jr. of Oregon State University and Ernst Heiss of Innsbruck, Austria.
The specific epithet dominicanus was coined as a reference to the country of the type locality, the Dominican Republic.