Checklist of Oecophylla species

The following species and subspecies belong to the genus Oecophylla. Synonyms are listed under their senior names. For valid names only see Oecophylla species.

L
longinoda (Latreille, 1802) (Burkina Faso, Central African Republic, Gambia, Guinea, Ivory Coast, Kenya, Mozambique, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Tanzania, Uganda)

• Oecophylla brevinodis André, 1890

longinoda annectens Wheeler, W.M., 1922 (Democratic Republic of Congo)

longinoda claridens Santschi, 1928 (Ivory Coast)

longinoda fusca Emery, 1899 (Cameroun, Liberia)

longinoda rubriceps Wheeler, W.M., 1922 (Democratic Republic of Congo)

longinoda rufescens Santschi, 1928 (Congo)

longinoda taeniata Santschi, 1928 (Democratic Republic of Congo)

longinoda textor Wheeler, W.M., 1922 (Kenya)

S
smaragdina (Fabricius, 1775) (Australia, Bangladesh, Borneo, Cambodia, China, India, Indonesia, Krakatau Islands, Nepal, New Guinea, Philippines, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Thailand)

• Formica macra Guérin-Méneville, 1831

• Formica virescens Fabricius, 1775

• Formica viridis Kirby, W., 1819

• Formica zonata Guérin-Méneville, 1838

smaragdina fuscoides Karavaiev, 1933 (Indonesia)

smaragdina gracilior Forel, 1911 (Indonesia)

smaragdina gracillima Emery, 1893 (Indonesia)

smaragdina selebensis Emery, 1893 (Indonesia, Sulawesi)

smaragdina subnitida Emery, 1892 (New Guinea, Solomon Islands)

=Fossil Species=

A
atavina Cockerell, 1915 (Great Britain)

B
bartoniana Cockerell, 1920 (Great Britain (Eocene))

brischkei Mayr, 1868 (Baltic Amber (Eocene))

C
crassinoda Wheeler, W.M., 1922 (Baltic Amber (Eocene))

• Oecophylla brevinodis Wheeler, W.M., 1915

E
eckfeldiana Dlussky, 2008 (Germany (Eocene))

G
grandimandibula Riou, 1999 (France (Miocene))

L
leakeyi Wilson & Taylor, 1964 (Kenya)

longiceps Dlussky, 2008 (Germany (Eocene))

M
megarche Cockerell, 1915 (Great Britain)

O
obesa (Heer, 1849) (Croatia (Miocene))

P
perdita Cockerell, 1915 (Great Britain)

praeclara Förster, 1891 (Germany (Oligocene))

S
sicula Emery, 1891 (Sicilian amber (Miocene))

superba Théobald, 1937 (France (Oligocene))