Hey, I'm fairly new to ant keeping, even tough I tried on a few occasion. Unfortunately it was not meant to be. Now, I'm trying to change that.
On Sunday, four days ago, I caught four queens I suspect are Lassius Niger (not sure, but I'll post some pictures as soon as I remember to bring my camera from work) and decided to make a formicarium for whichever one turns out to be most fertile. They are currently each in their own small Petri dish, each with a cotton ball of water and a cotton ball of sugar water. So far none has laid any eggs. I try not to disturb them very much and check up on them only once a day.
Anyway, I'm thinking of building a natural formicarium that should provide a bit of space. Here are my ideas and thinking process, and I would appreciate if you guys could tell me if I'm doing something wrong.
I have an aquarium 40x20x25 cm (18x8x10 in) that I plan on covering with acrylic lid with access and ventilation holes (covered in fine mesh) so the ants don't escape. I also ordered PTFE fluon thing, it should hopefully be arriving in a few days.
Bottom few cm (inch or so) would be rocks for drainage, then some screen to block soil from dropping down in between rocks, and then about 10 cm (4 in) of soil for ants to live in. That leaves me with about another 10 cm of head room where I'd like to plant some greenery (moss or other small plants) on approximately half of the surface and leave the other half a bit more barren to give me a chance to possibly observe the ants and give a bit more diversity. Perhaps the plants will spread but I could always do some gardening. A few rocks and dry branches for decor etc. I was thinking of adding some springtails to help with the ecosystem. I know that this approach will most likely not allow me to watch the nest, but I'd like to provide the ants with a comfortable place to live in, and I assume that would be natural soil.
That's all good I suppose, however, since I live in temperate region (northern Croatia) I understand that I'll have to hibernate the ants during winter, since that's what they would expect and need for a healthy and long life. At this time I'm not sure I'll be able to put them in a refrigerator for several months, but I could keep them on my balcony in a thermally insulated box, with a heater to kick in when needed to bring the temperature up to 5 - 8 °C (40 - 46 °F), and here is the main problem/dilemma I have. I had an idea that I think could work, but wanted to bounce it off of you guys. I would drill a hole in a fist sized rock and install a heater inside it. The rock would be ground flat on one side and glued to the side of the aquarium. Of course I'd drill a hole in the glass as well for the wires to go through. A bit of electronics would monitor the temperature and control the heater. This way the rock could be placed much deeper into the habitat than just a surface heater on the outside of the tank and would provide a more even heating. That's the idea anyway. I don't think I'd need to run the heater during the rest of the year, but the electronics could manage that too (a degree or two above room temp) if the ants decide they like it.
If I'm going down this route, I have to start the work rather soon, because, fingers crossed, I expect the queens to start laying eggs any day now and baby ants will soon follow.
So, what do you guys think about this setup? Do you see something fundamentally wrong with this approach?
Edit:
Updated title to include another provisional ID.
Edited by Domagoj, July 14 2020 - 12:11 AM.