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Pleometrosis to polygyny?
Started By
Kalidas
, Nov 26 2019 5:28 PM
3 replies to this topic
#1 Offline - Posted November 26 2019 - 5:28 PM
Strange question I know but it is something I was curious about. Is it possible for an ant colony that engages in pleometrosis to become polygynous or could you as an ant keeper encourage this?
Like an idea I thought of was based on something I saw here a while back. I remember someone asking about introducing a new queen to an ant colony that had lost its queen. Someone suggested taking some workers and crushing them up into a kind of paste and "painting" the queen in it and the workers would recognize the new queen because of the pheromones.
Could something like this maybe work to help extend the coexistence of the multiple queens long past what would normally happen in nature?
Like an idea I thought of was based on something I saw here a while back. I remember someone asking about introducing a new queen to an ant colony that had lost its queen. Someone suggested taking some workers and crushing them up into a kind of paste and "painting" the queen in it and the workers would recognize the new queen because of the pheromones.
Could something like this maybe work to help extend the coexistence of the multiple queens long past what would normally happen in nature?
#2 Offline - Posted November 26 2019 - 9:28 PM
yes, but you could not really influence something like this.
#3 Offline - Posted November 26 2019 - 10:32 PM
Yeah I didn't think so.
#4 Offline - Posted November 27 2019 - 9:55 AM
Even if the colony matures and grows into several thousand workers, the queens could still kill each other (or get killed by workers) at any given time.
Edited by AntsDakota, November 27 2019 - 9:55 AM.
"God made..... all the creatures that move along the ground according to their kinds (including ants). And God saw that it was good. Genesis 1:25 NIV version
Keeping:
Formica cf. pallidefulva, cf. incerta, cf. argentea
Formica cf. aserva, cf. subintegra
Myrmica sp.
Lasius neoniger, brevicornis
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