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Melophorus sp.
The nanitics maybe small, and there are only 3 of them, plus one second generation worker, but they are bold enough to fully explore the attached outworld.
And the dead Pheidole larve that was untouched by the Humilior, I dropped into the Melophorus Sp. outworld, and one worker has already found and dragged it into the nest
They still haven't finished that small piece of almond I gave them though
dead Pheidole larve on the left - gives you an idea how small the nanitics are, although I think it might be a Pheidole major larvae as it's bigger than the Pheidole workers
Edited by CoolColJ, March 17 2018 - 8:15 PM.
Spamdy likes this
Current ant colonies -
1) Opisthopsis Rufithorax (strobe ant), Melophorus sp2. black and orange, Pheidole species, Pheidole antipodum
Journal = http://www.formicult...ra-iridomyrmex/
#43
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anttics
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Posted March 19 2018 - 8:03 AM
anttics
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The Queen was munching on the roach for a bit of the day and then dragged it out back to the nest entrance.
I thought that was it.
Then they dragged it back in and had more munching, and now some of the workers joined in.
They are still going at it, the next day, and will likely last them the whole week.
I noticed some roach legs on the cotton wool.
They also moved the larvae away from the cotton wool and put them straight on the test tube floor and are feeding them continuously.
I think there are 3 big larvae now and a bunch of eggs that must have been laid recently
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Been thinking of getting some Melophorus ants, aka Furnace ants.
They look interesting, with majors as well - cute heads and eyes
Almost Pheidole type difference between minor and majors (10mm in the larger species)
They love heat and move really fast when it's hot
are these furnace ants. I thought they were some pheidole species. they look beautiful.
are these furnace ants. I thought they were some pheidole species. they look beautiful.
Yes, these are Melophorus Sp. ants. The larger big headed ones are the majors. The majors also have larger gasters, so they can appear like queens, and in some species they act like honey pot ants But they are not as massively headed as Pheidole majors, nor as slow and clumsy
Apparently there are like 300 species of Melophorus ants in Australia, and most have not been studied Most are bimorphic, but some polymorphic to a pretty large degree with variations in size, shape and colour, like the different castes could be from different types of ants
same colony....click to enlarge
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I ordered one of these to try out as a test tube replacement founding nest. Pretty cheap, not as cheap as test tubes but still not bad at $13AUD ($10US) including 2 week EMS delivery to Australia, from Aliexpress.
Getting a white one. I thought this would be the most neutral colour to be able to see the ants as well as the brood, and photograph well
These have a 10mm tube exit. Advantages over test tube - a sponge hydration system, with optional use of a refillable test tube and sponge to wick water onto it for long term hydration, which shouldn't have the same mold issues as a cotton dam in a test tube. There is a sliding lid near the exit to use as a feeding port. Flat surface for ants to walk on. No refraction image issues, and less reflections on the coloured versions.
Current ant colonies -
1) Opisthopsis Rufithorax (strobe ant), Melophorus sp2. black and orange, Pheidole species, Pheidole antipodum
Journal = http://www.formicult...ra-iridomyrmex/
My Melophorus sp. family this morning - I noticed they brought in substrate from outworld into the test tube overnight. Either for the brood or to make it less slippery, as they do seem to have problem running on glass - one reason why I am thinking of moving them into one of my AtomC nests.
Of the 4 workers, 3 are of different size, and the largest one has Camponotus style gaster stripes.
There is a Pheidole larvae on the very far left. Which I'm not sure if they are using as food or raising/feeding....
Plus 2 dead insects I raided from a Pheidole trail in my backyard
click to enlarge
Edited by CoolColJ, March 19 2018 - 2:24 PM.
Current ant colonies -
1) Opisthopsis Rufithorax (strobe ant), Melophorus sp2. black and orange, Pheidole species, Pheidole antipodum
Journal = http://www.formicult...ra-iridomyrmex/
Keep them in the dark all day, or as much as possible, if they are hard to raise. Much better chances with that.
I'll see how they go for the next few weeks.
The queen was pretty frisky today, hauling up the dead insect (beetle/bug or some sort), first time I've seen her do that.
I think she was trying to store it on the cotton wool dam, but didn't succeed thankfully, for mold reasons
Maybe she will lay her eggs on it?
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Have a Raynox macro attachment thing coming which I can use for all my fixed lens cameras, should greatly improve my close up focus and magnify a 3cm area to full 14mp size without cropping.
Right now I have to crop down to 1:1 pixel ratio
Edited by CoolColJ, March 23 2018 - 2:30 AM.
Current ant colonies -
1) Opisthopsis Rufithorax (strobe ant), Melophorus sp2. black and orange, Pheidole species, Pheidole antipodum
Journal = http://www.formicult...ra-iridomyrmex/
Damn my Melophorus sp. queen finally laid 2 new eggs last night, while I was asleep!
And one larvae turned into a cocoon.
So happy
Before I went to sleep, there was two workers furiously carting in substrate from the outworld, and one nibbling on a small piece of raw macadamia just outside of the nest entrance
It seems she always lays in batches of two or something.
One egg already looks larger and more developed
That also makes 2/3 on raw nuts, they loved the raw almond last week, ignored the pecan, and macadamia is good.
Dropped one piece of raw macadamia inside the nest yesterday, and a smaller one just otuside the nest entrance.
The one side they ignored and were kinda sacred of, they would detour around it.
I removed it, but later that night one worker was chewing on the other one outside.
Mine don't like raw honey, nor sugar water? I mean one worker fell into my sugar water feeding dish yesterday, when climbing the outworld wall yesterday, and just got out without even acknowledging it.
I see them walk around the top of the feeding dishes but never going to the bottom to feed on the raw honey/sugar water.
Froze a small Witchetty grub I found yesterday, will slice it up and try it on them later in the week
click to enlarge
Edited by CoolColJ, March 24 2018 - 3:37 PM.
Current ant colonies -
1) Opisthopsis Rufithorax (strobe ant), Melophorus sp2. black and orange, Pheidole species, Pheidole antipodum
Journal = http://www.formicult...ra-iridomyrmex/
Took a good look at the Strobe ant queen this morning, and yes, looks like my first nanitic is not far off
One cocoon.
6 total brood from original batch, well I lost one egg in the transfer to this nest, it sprung off my cotton bud and into the void
Of this original batch - 1 cocoon, 2 pupae, 2 larger larvae and one smaller one (I think)
Looks like she laid 3 new eggs since last week, so 6 total in the month she has been in this nest.
So at the very least there should be 12 extra critters for the queen
click to enlarge
Edited by CoolColJ, March 24 2018 - 5:48 PM.
irvosanjose likes this
Current ant colonies -
1) Opisthopsis Rufithorax (strobe ant), Melophorus sp2. black and orange, Pheidole species, Pheidole antipodum
Journal = http://www.formicult...ra-iridomyrmex/
I found a nest of what looks like Melophorus in my backyard, in the expansion joint of the concrete sidewalk - no surprise, they love heat.
They look like Melophorus, reddish upper body with a bulbous gaster, and zippy movements.
Lots of workers dropping dirt outside the nest.
I didn't see any majors though.
Probably not the same species as mine
So yeah I can't believe how many different types of ants are in my backyard!
Last week I found some Cremogaster here as well, heart shaped gaster, and they stick their gaster into the air
Two different Pheidole species - smaller red, and larger black/red ones.
A few Iridomyrmex species - from pavement ants to larger ones
Black Polyrachis type ant.
This morning, some tiny 1-2mm ants doing a tandem scout, near the above Melophorus nest
Tetramorium bicarinatum looking ant - I've seen these occupy Pheidole nests, that may have been abandoned. Kinda weird it's like the Pheidole keep swapping around the nest entrance locations and you will see these ants in the old location.
The larger Pheidole species nest with these medium large Iridomyrmex looking ants taking on a worm, kinda "meat ant" looking. I only noticed them yesterday
Just look at the size of that Pheidole major vs the workers
I have been seeing others in my state catching a lot of Phediole queens recently, it is their nuptial season right now.
One guy even had one test tube of 20 queens, and several test tubes of 5!
Still haven't seen the ones in my yard fly yet....
It's also bull ant season, and I thought I saw a winged queen in my side yard a week ago, but I only saw it on the ground for a few second before it scurried into a hole in the fence.
It was about an inch big, but it may have been a wasp.....
Edited by CoolColJ, March 26 2018 - 5:41 PM.
Current ant colonies -
1) Opisthopsis Rufithorax (strobe ant), Melophorus sp2. black and orange, Pheidole species, Pheidole antipodum
Journal = http://www.formicult...ra-iridomyrmex/
Some quick rushed shots of the above ants - hard to photo due to small scurrying ants... might be able to get better ones later on, if they will move into test tube etc
About 5mm queen and 2-3 mm workers.
Quite the booty on the queen and some workers
Edited by CoolColJ, March 26 2018 - 8:54 PM.
irvosanjose likes this
Current ant colonies -
1) Opisthopsis Rufithorax (strobe ant), Melophorus sp2. black and orange, Pheidole species, Pheidole antipodum
Journal = http://www.formicult...ra-iridomyrmex/
#60
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Canadian anter
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Posted March 27 2018 - 5:05 AM
Canadian anter
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Those are not majors, just workers and those are very similar to the Tapinoma sessile we have here. Probably is Ochetellus glaber or perhaps a Technomyrmex.
Also tagged with one or more of these keywords: journal, opisthopsis rufithorax, strobe ant, camponotus, melophorus, furnace ant, pheidole, iridomyrmex, suffusus, polyrhachis, rufifemur, meat ant, antipodum, rhytidoponera, aphaenogaster, nigrocincta, aspera, myrmecia, bull ant, fulvipes