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The 4th Annual New Jersey Ant Together


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#1 Offline MrILoveTheAnts - Posted May 21 2015 - 5:38 PM

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This year the 4th Annual New Jersey Ant Together will be held at Jakes Branch County Park. Website. Map and depending on how things go, Turkey Swamp Park sometime after lunch.

 

 

Date: Wednesday, July 1st

Time: 8:00am meet and greet, ~8:15 or 8:30 we'll start anting.

We'll meet up at the Nature Center (the main building with the green roof) It's the one with the red star on their map.

Age: While this is free for the public to attend, however this is basically an all day hiking trip, and might not be appropriate for children and the elderly. Ideally people attending should be a legal adult age, old enough to drive, or accompanied by a parent or guardian. This isn't a baby sitting service, and mother nature generally isn't handicap assessable. Several people, myself included, will likely be taking video and pictures on the day and children make that difficult.

 

 

First Location:

I chose this location for a few reasons. Along with having a family friendly park and viewing deck it has 400 acres of natural lands and trails to explore. A study done on Trachymyrmex lists the nearby town of Island Heights as a spot T. septentrionalis can be found, however it's since become overly urbanized and probably wouldn't make for good anting. Thankfully this location is down the road from Jakes Branch County Park so we'll hopefully find a population of them there.

 

Lunch: We'll likely find a dinner somewhere. I'm open to ideas.

 

Second Location:

Turkey Swamp Park is home to the Allegheny Mound Ant, Formica exsectoides, which are always fun to visit. There are a few trails here that we've never explored. It's not too far from Jakes Branch but still a bit of a drive.

 

 

 

Consider Bringing:

A Backpack

Sunscreen and or Bug Repellent

A Small Garden Spade or some sort of Picking Tool for probing into logs and flipping rocks. NJ has at least two species of venomous snakes, and there are plenty of other critters that will bite or sting you for putting your hand in their home.

Bottled Water (I'll be bringing a cooler of Water and whatever energy drink is on sale.)

Something to snack on if you desire, remember to clean up your trash of course.

A Cooling Towel. These things actually work, I might buy a few extra for the day if it's going to be a hot one. 

An Aspirator if you own one, or your ant collecting tool of choice. 

Collecting tubes for live specimens. 

Collecting tubes for dead specimens. (I'll be collecting some of everything in a vial of Alcohol for later study.)

Anything else you can think of. A moderate sized container perhaps for an easy to catch colony we chance upon. Remember we're not here to dig up colonies but should you happen upon a queen ant or colony that would be an easy catch, we're not going to stop you unless it's destructive to the environment. Digging through a patch of rare plants, taking logs of ants home with you, ripping the bark off of every tree you come across, etc..., are huge red flags. We're not there to destroy the place. 

 

Camera and or small note pad for recording observations. I'll likely be recording an episode of Ant Chat as I usually do. If you'd like to not be recorded by me or anyone else, please tell us on the day of.

 

Dress as if you expect to be covered in ticks and chiggers by the end of the day. Tuck in your shirt and socks is recommended but we understand it's not always practical on warm days. No one is making you do this but it's something to think about. We've yet to come across a population of deer ticks, which makes us pretty lucky because they carry Lyme disease. Rest assured they're out there though. After the trip, and periodically during the trip, you should give yourself a thorough search. Avoid walking in tall or knee high grass, and stay away from leaf litter if possible, especially in wet areas where Ticks tend to populate more heavily than dry. It takes roughly 24 hours for ticks to begin feeding on your blood even after they've burrowed into your skin. 

 

 

Let Me Know If You're Going!

I'll be PMing everyone who's going my personal cell phone number. This way we have a list of people so if we need to change things up or you're running late or have to cancel everyone can stay informed. 


Edited by MrILoveTheAnts, June 26 2015 - 12:05 PM.


#2 Offline Lamarr - Posted May 22 2015 - 2:13 PM

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This sounds very interesting! Sadly it will take me 14 hours to travel by car from my house to Jakes Branch County Park so going there isn't an option. :(

I hope you guys have fun anting though!



#3 Offline WeatherAnt - Posted June 3 2015 - 8:54 PM

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I'll be attending this, of course. Hopefully we can get a few more people to join us! Every year so far has been tons of fun and we've always found many ant species ... including some rare/unusual finds! 



#4 Offline Crystals - Posted June 4 2015 - 7:10 AM

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I always enjoy watching the videos, since there is no way I could possibly come down for the adventure.


"Always do right. This will gratify some people, and astound the rest." -- Samuel Clemens

 

List of Handy Links   (pinned in the General section)

My Colonies


#5 Offline dspdrew - Posted June 4 2015 - 7:19 AM

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Yeah. Get lots of video; I like watching them too.



#6 Offline Ants4fun - Posted June 4 2015 - 9:00 AM

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Love watching the videos on MrIlovethe ant's youtube chanel. Definitely make another New Jersey ant together vid!



#7 Offline MrILoveTheAnts - Posted June 14 2015 - 3:56 PM

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Just so everyone knows, it's been requested to hold the event on Saturday the 27th instead of Sunday the 28th. I don't have any problems with this so I've changed the date of the main event. If there is someone out there who could only do it on Sunday, I'll be more than happy to go anting on both days.



#8 Offline WeatherAnt - Posted June 14 2015 - 6:31 PM

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Just so everyone knows, it's been requested to hold the event on Saturday the 27th instead of Sunday the 28th. I don't have any problems with this so I've changed the date of the main event. If there is someone out there who could only do it on Sunday, I'll be more than happy to go anting on both days.

 

Yeah this is my fault. Haha. 



#9 Offline MrILoveTheAnts - Posted June 26 2015 - 12:06 PM

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Due to rain and scheduling issues among the three of us who are confirmed as going, the date of the Ant Together has been moved to Wednesday, July 1st.



#10 Offline MrILoveTheAnts - Posted July 3 2015 - 7:22 PM

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http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v735/mrilovetheants/NJ%20Ant%20Together%20Formica%20pallidefulva.jpg

For the even I bought some specially labeled tubes which I intend to hand out at these events. The idea being to put queen ants in them to get what I refer to as the "money shot" and try to sell the event and get more interest. I can use this as the banner image for future Ant Togethers.... but dammit if I'm not the worst ant keeper in the whole god dam world. Later on we're in the parking lot and of all the test tubes to fall out of my bag.... I ran her [censored] over!  :dash:  Somehow she survived and upon putting her in another tube she seems to have recovered well, a little twitchy though. I believe she is the dark form of Formica pallidefulva which is more common in this part of New Jersey. It's odd how just a little bit south this species becomes a brassy brown tone. We found colonies of both color forms around but the darker one was by far more common.  

 

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v735/mrilovetheants/NJ%20Ant%20Together%20Camponotus%20chromaiodes.jpg

This one made it to the car!

 

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v735/mrilovetheants/NJ%20Ant%20Together%20Camponotus%20chromaiodes%202.jpg

Camponotus chromaiodes. (Same ant as seen above) This is typically the dominant Camponotus species in the forests here.

 

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v735/mrilovetheants/NJ%20Ant%20Together%20Formica%20parasite%203.jpg

We also found a parasitic Formica wondering which I still need to ID. We actually didn't find any colonies of this at that location so it might be one of the more exclusive slave making kind such as F. pergandei. (Their colonies always require host Formica and never grow beyond what they can capture.)

 

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v735/mrilovetheants/Pyramica%202.jpg

Finding a colony of Pyramica was something of a highlight because it's not commonly found in suburban habitats.

 

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v735/mrilovetheants/Dorymyrmex%20sp.jpg

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v735/mrilovetheants/Dorymyrmex%20sp%202.jpg

Slightly less of a highlight but still interesting was this patch of bright white sand where colonies of Dorymyrmex were located.

 

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v735/mrilovetheants/Monomorium%20LIchen%20cluster.jpg

This sand patch is also where a dried out sort of sphagnum moss was growing which we tried not to disturb. There were some large colonies of Monomorium there too.

 

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v735/mrilovetheants/Pine%20Snake.jpg

Just up the trail we found a Pine Snake.

 

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v735/mrilovetheants/Wild%20Blueberry.jpg

I liked our first location a lot because Wild Blueberries were coming into season. I'd never realized how much better Low Bush Blueberry tastes compared to High Bush because the plants grow in full shade the berries are at a more reasonable temperature. High Bush blueberry is more of a forest edge, full sun plant, thus the berries have a sharp taste to them unless chilled.

 

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v735/mrilovetheants/Sweet%20Fern.jpg

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v735/mrilovetheants/Sweet%20Fern%202.jpg

Sweet Fern was also growing all over the place along with droves of other types of ferns. This one in particular is adored by gardeners because the leaves have a pleasing smell to them.

 

I was calling this Wintergreen all day but now that I google it I'm not convinced. Anyone know what this is?

 

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v735/mrilovetheants/Red%20Milkweed.jpg

I also got to see Red Milkweed, Asclepias rubra, which is one of the rare species not yet in mainstream cultivation. It seems to be a bog plant requiring constantly damp muddy soil to grow.

 

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v735/mrilovetheants/Milkweed%20Formica%201.jpg

Ants actually really like Milkweed so it's one of the plants I pay attention to. Formica especially seem to like stealing the nectar from Common Milkweed, Asclepias syriaca.

 

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v735/mrilovetheants/Milkweed%20Formica.jpg

This is the dark form of Formica pallidefulva I believe.

 

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v735/mrilovetheants/Common%20Milkweed%203.jpg

At our second location, Turkey Swamp Park, I'm happy to say they seem to finally be doing something with that wide open field. Namely just not mowing patches of it here and there so the milkweed gets to grow. 

 

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v735/mrilovetheants/Milkweed%20Formica%202.jpg

It's here where we found yet another species of Formica all over the flowers. And I think this is the same as the next one below... this milkweed patch was right between the F. exsectoides super colonies, and a population of some other Formica who's majors rivaled the size of C. chromaiodes majors.

 

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v735/mrilovetheants/Formica%20Big.jpg

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v735/mrilovetheants/Formica%20Big%202.jpg

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v735/mrilovetheants/Formica%20Foraging%20Trail.jpg

What's neat is they actually had foraging trenches dug out that occasionally dipped down underground. And we found multiple trails like this coming from the forest to some plants that were growing along a lake/stream where they were tending to droves of aphids like an assembly line.

 

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v735/mrilovetheants/Formica%20exsectoides%20Mounds%202.jpg

We found quite a few more Formica exsectoides mounds this years. They were far more active, like 10 times more aggressive, and very pissed off that I inserted an endoscope into their mound. The video didn't really come out though... kind of like a horrifying colonoscopy video really.

 

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v735/mrilovetheants/Formica%20exsectoides%20Mounds.jpg

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v735/mrilovetheants/Formica%20exsectoides%20Mounds%203.jpg


Edited by MrILoveTheAnts, July 3 2015 - 7:26 PM.

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#11 Offline MrILoveTheAnts - Posted July 3 2015 - 7:25 PM

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http://img.photobuck...er Termites.jpg

We also found Termites nesting just beneath the bark of a tree, and just below that a Crematogaster colony had a brood chamber which we broke into unexpectidly thus starting a small war. 

 

http://img.photobuck...Bane Beetle.jpg

This is a Dog Bane Beetle. I like that their feet are blue.

 

Frogs!

 

http://img.photobuck...ants/Frog 4.jpg

Frogs for days!

http://img.photobuck...ants/Frog 3.jpg

http://img.photobuck...ants/Frog 2.jpg

High Five?

 

http://img.photobuck...Indian Pipe.jpg

Last of all found this to be an ideal time to go looking for Indian Pipe. This is a rare wildflower that you will only ever see growing in the wild. It's a parasite that requires a beneficial fungi to be prescient in the soil to exchange nutrients from an established tree, typically a 60' tall Oak.

 

http://img.photobuck...dian Pipe 2.jpg

Oddly enough though we kept finding it trying to grow beneath logs. Not just on one occasion but on several! Suggesting that the seeds somehow find their way under dead wood structures, or maybe this is where the beneficial fungus most often occurs?

 

http://img.photobuck...dian Pipe 3.jpg

Basically because it's a parasitic plant, it doesn't produce any chlorophyll, thus it's not green but rather a frail white. 

 

http://img.photobuck...dian Pipe 6.jpg

After flowering, the plant almost sorts of melts, and shrivels up into twig-like stems.

 

Fallen leaves in a spot that floods on occasion, apparently dyed a silver tone from the algae or something growing on them.


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#12 Offline dspdrew - Posted July 3 2015 - 7:58 PM

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I love frogs.

 

Subverted should like those last pictures.



#13 Offline Lamarr - Posted July 3 2015 - 8:30 PM

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I like the idea of making special test tubes for the anting events!



#14 Offline MrILoveTheAnts - Posted July 4 2015 - 7:15 PM

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#15 Offline dspdrew - Posted July 5 2015 - 7:45 AM

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Wow those are some small anotations. So you're not calling it Ant Chat anymore?
 
Mercutia will love https://youtu.be/_6mUfyqfxUk?t=859.

That was a hell of an ending. :lol:



#16 Offline AntsAreUs - Posted July 5 2015 - 11:59 AM

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The ants at 12 minutes I have near my forest, they are parasitic I think. I want a colony of them so bad!



#17 Offline MrILoveTheAnts - Posted July 5 2015 - 1:19 PM

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Ant Chat videos tend to be better planned with a specific topic in mind. The New Jersey Ant Together and Ants of the Southwest are more documentaries of trips I plan or attend.

 

Formica integra is in the rufa group, thus newly founding queens have to invade a host colony in order to start a new nest, but they can also be found by workers of an established colony and brought back to an established colonies where they join the egg laying force. So it might be possible to divide or take a fragment of the colony with queens, however this group is also known for spraying formic acid thus they might kill themselves unintentionally. It might be possible to get a colony to establish in your yard this way but probably not in captivity. The acid in a tight space will kill them.






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