Well everybody, I've done it. I caught a Neivamyrmex colony. And before you go out and chastise me, I know. Not my best decision. I really wasn't anticipating it at all, but here's what happened: While I was out looking for other queens I stumbled across a Neivamyrmex trail. I quickly started recording them, and well, I'll just let you watch what happened.
WIthin a minute of filming, the queen came right out of the hole they were moving from and into perfect view. I was stunned at first, but in a split second decision I scooped her up into a test tube. From then I dug up the hole they were coming from, encountering 2 large chambers full of larvae and workers. I'd estimate I got probably 1.5-2k workers in total.
I kept them in a ziploc bag full of the soil they were in overnight, and they made a temporary bivouac right on the surface. The next morning, I threw together a temporary setup consisting of two tall containers full of dirt and an outworld. They took a liking to the shorter of the two nesting containers, and set up a bivouac around a rock that was in the container.
As a start, once they had gotten settled in, I offered them some Monomorium viridium brood. The colony in question is currently exploding out of their mini hearth, so I'd consider this to be an effective method of population control. I gave them a giant superworm as an apology for taking some of their brood.
The Neivamyrmex seemingly enjoyed the brood. It took them a minute to notice it, but once they did they quickly took every last piece. Because the individual brood pieces were so small, some of the larger workers had a hard time carrying them, but in the end they got the job done.
I'll be the first to admit I am royally unprepared to keep these ants. I'm trying to cram as much info on them into my head as possible, but any direct advice from those who have kept Neivamyrmex before would be very much appreciated. Hopefully I can keep this journal afloat for more than a few weeks, but either way I wanted to get this colony documented online for everyone else to see. I believe the species is either Neivamyrmex nigrescens or Neivamyrmex kiowapache, although I may be wrong. Arizona has a lot of species of Neivamyrmex, so there's definitely a few species they could theoretically be. I'll probably end up sending specimens to AnthonyP163 for him to look at under a microscope.
Edited by CheetoLord02, August 17 2021 - 12:30 PM.