I decided to combine both species into one journal, as it will be a bit easier to maintain than two additional journals and I got them at the same time anyway.
----Pheidole Moerens--
While I was briefly staying at a motel yesterday, I decided to look around to see what I could find as far as ants go. The first thing I saw was Monomorium ergatogyna and a tiny Argentine ant colony. I saw no Pheidole workers around at all.
So, I was pretty surprised to lift a piece of wood and find a colony of P. moerens nesting in it! Including (extremely likely, as I dug around there and saw no sign of any additional nest. Since there is fresh batches of eggs in the wood, and alates...99% sure I got the queen). I have been trying to get a colony of this species for a while, and they are sort of common here in Irvine (Southern California)...but hard to get.
Very tiny species (tiny alates too, so I imagine tiny queens)...and while in nature they only get small colonies (usually 500 workers and 100 soldiers). I'm sort of hoping like a couple other known species (Dorymyrmex bicolor and Pheidole hyatti), they end up growing a lot more in captivity. I'm not sure if anyone has actually kept this species (I did a quick google search and found barely any info on this one even though they are common), so guess I'll find out if with an increase of food and better conditions...they end up growing bigger in colony size. As for being common, they are really easy to miss...so probably why they aren't very noticed.
Also, one little fact. They very rarely nest in soil. They mostly nest in plants and wood I believe...so its almost definite I got the entire colony (except maybe a few workers in their tunnels in the soil I might have missed).
This species is more slow moving than my Pheidole megacephala colony, also vastly less aggressive. I kind of like that. And one big positive, they eat seeds! That is why I like harvester ant species and other Pheidole so much...I am really interested and like seed-eating ants the most. My P. megacephala colony never eats seeds at all and are really picky.
Since I just got them yesterday not much else to add. But, really hope this colony does well. They are my best find yesterday.
And next up...
---Monomorium ergatogyna--
First. Yeah not sure if I'll keep them or trade/sell them off if someone wants them. I'll see how things go.
I got WAY more than I ever wanted to get. Over 100 queens (they hide super easily in the soil and are hard to see), too many workers to count and tons of brood and alates. When I was getting them, I did not even see 25% of the amount of ants I got when I was collecting them, so they hide really well and must be so tiny they are easy to miss.
So with that...they are very tiny (tiny queens too) and I doubt each queen by herself lays many eggs (so tiny). But, I got SO many queens...
I actually really like this species though. They are native, but like Tapinoma sessile...can develop supercolonies in urban areas. One colony I saw stretched an entire block, going up a rather large hill and had millions of workers and I have no idea how many queens (must have been TONS). They also win most of their fights against Solenopsis invicta (and other Solenopsis, like Solenopsis xyloni that I saw dead bodies around some of the M. ergatogyna mounds) and win 100% of their fights against Argentine ants. So, in an urban area with only S. invicta or Argentine ants around, they are probably beneficial as they do allow other ants to live amongst them (except they do kill the workers a lot of the other ants. But that is probably a bit normal. Never take over their nests of native ants). However. They'll go inside Argentine ant colonies (they seem to target this species a lot) and kick them out (seen this quite often). Which is actually funny to see Argentine ants taking all their brood and everything and running off. Then the M. ergatogyna queens come along and occupy it (which is even funnier to watch as in one case, the Argentine ant colony was huge that was nesting there).
They are really easy to keep overall. Except they take someone pretty skilled at keeping ants to keep them and you NEED fluon (nothing else works) and it needs to be applied perfectly. They are probably #1 native California ant at escaping (even Solenopsis molesta is easier to prevent escaping. ). Depending on the plastic, they can even easily walk over the fluon (and it wasn't how I applied it, as I applied it exactly same as all my other ants and it always worked). I switched containers early (or I'd have had huge problems on my hand) and the fluon (again applied the same) worked a lot better. Probably one of the few species that has an easier time walking over fluon, if the quality of plastic has too many little rough edges invisible to the eye. Even my Pheidole megacephala (and, Argentine ants I briefly kept) can't even get past fluon no matter the container.
So, after losing some workers (not that many)...and doing touchups on the fluon (even a hint of dust or speck of dirt lets this species walk over it without issue). I ended up with (after an hour) an escape proof container.
I'll see how this species ends up doing. I really want to keep them and get a good colony out of them and they'll make huge nests all inter-connected from containers I hook up in the future. It would look awesome. And they readily make trails. But, I'm not sure if I'm really skilled enough at keeping them properly. So, we'll see.
Oh and speaking of trails...they recruit faster than any ant I've personally seen in California. Twice as fast as Pheidole megacephala (which already recruits really fast). Put in food? Literally one worker finds it, and 2-3 seconds later a trail is made and a bunch of workers are getting the food. Connect two ant farms up with tubing? One worker goes in. Seconds later many workers go in. All from one worker, and suddenly a whole bunch of ants follow behind within a matter of 2-4 seconds.
Edited by Vendayn, May 4 2015 - 7:26 PM.