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Aphaenogaster picea covering their food with debris and refusing to eat it?
Started By
Manitobant
, Oct 20 2019 2:33 PM
2 replies to this topic
#1 Offline - Posted October 20 2019 - 2:33 PM
My 75 worker aphaenogaster picea colony has started to no longer accept sugar water and have started covering it with debris in the outworld. I know that ants are known to do this in order to soak up flooded water, but this is strange because the colony still has a ton of brood (well over 100) and are devouring crickets like crazy.
- Antennal_Scrobe likes this
My journals:
Polyergus Mexicanus: https://www.formicul...gs/#entry175528
Lasius minutus: https://www.formicul...cs/#entry174811
Lasius latipes: https://www.formicul...gs/#entry206449
General acanthomyops journal: https://www.formicul...yops-with-eggs/
Polyergus Mexicanus: https://www.formicul...gs/#entry175528
Lasius minutus: https://www.formicul...cs/#entry174811
Lasius latipes: https://www.formicul...gs/#entry206449
General acanthomyops journal: https://www.formicul...yops-with-eggs/
#2 Offline - Posted October 20 2019 - 2:37 PM
Aphaenogaster are mostly carnivorous ants, and ants as a whole feed protein to their young and sugar to themselves. Perhaps the workers are just full. You could also try raw honey like the stuff I use; it's very chunky and ants with no social stomach could easily carry in pieces of it.
By the way I am jealous of your colony.
Currently keeping:
Tetramorium immigrans, Pogonomyrmex occidentalis
Myrmica punctiventris, Formica subsericea
Formica pallidefulva, Aphaeogaster cf. rudis
Camponotus pennsylvanicus
Camponotus nearcticus
Crematogaster cerasi
Temnothorax ambiguus
Prenolepis imparis
#3 Offline - Posted October 22 2019 - 5:26 PM
i flipped over a tree trunk and found a picea queen so i caught her and arounw 25 workers they all ran by the time i could get more
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