A few weeks ago I received this M. mimicus queen from a buddy in Tucson. At the time she already had a good batch of eggs, but she would actually go on to eat most of them when I added sand to the test tube.
Despite the bit of cannibalism it caused, the addition of sand was definitely the right move. She quickly laid many more eggs right afterwards, and from there I left her totally in the dark for around 3 weeks. I did peek at her every once in a while, but not enough to really do anything other than make sure she was still alive. After a while, though, I decided to check on her brood, and boy did she have a lot, including her first pupa!
I'm pretty sure in that pic she had 1 pupa, 16-17 larvae, and over 20 eggs. For a founding queen, that's pretty impressive. I've only seen Pheidole and Solenopsis do that well.
Another week and a half or so from when she got her first pupa, she followed up with 10 more, meaning she has a total of 11 pupae as of right now. The first one should hopefully eclose within a week or two, with the rest following suit. I don't see anymore large larvae, so it's safe to assume that (if she lasts that long) she'll be getting 11 nanitics. I've got a mini hearth XL prepped for when all 11 eclose, and will be moving them into it at that point.
Edited by CheetoLord02, August 4 2021 - 10:49 AM.