Scientific illustration of Eoformica pinguis ant - showing key identification features including head, thorax, and gaster.

Fossil Eoformica pinguis

Non-Parasitic Queen No Gamergate
Sci. Name
Eoformica pinguis
Author
Scudder, 1877
Fossil
Yes (fossil species)
Distribution
Found in 1 countries

Introduction

Eoformica pinguis is an extinct ant species from the Eocene epoch, living approximately 50 million years ago. It is known from exceptional fossil impressions in the Green River Formation of the western United States (Colorado, Montana, Utah, and Wyoming) as well as the Kishenehn Formation . This species is one of the most abundant ant fossils ever discovered, comprising about 40% of all ant impressions in the Green River deposit . Males measured 6.00–6.85 mm in body length (average 6.35 mm), and females were slightly larger at 7.3–7.5 mm . The genus Eoformica cannot be reliably placed in any modern subfamily – it likely belongs to either Dolichoderinae or Formicinae, but intact wing fossils needed for definitive classification have never been found .

Loading distribution map...

Status by country, from Kass et al. 2022 & Wong et al. 2023

Native Invasive Introduced (indoor) Intercepted Unknown
2000 - 2026
Fossil

No caresheet needed

Eoformica pinguis is a fossil species and does not require a caresheet.