Today I liked to startup my Pogonomyrmex Occidentalis journal but with a special guest! This journal will be about my adventures with my budding Pogonomyrmex Occidentalis colony and my humble little Pogonomyrmex Rugosus queen!
So, let's get to what happened to my old Pogonomyrmex Occidentalis colony. Everything was going well and I moved them to a new nest and then the troubles occured. The water tower in their nest had a small hole that was punctured in it during the process of building it but I didn't notice until my Pogonomyrmex went in there. Unfortuantley their old nest I wouldn't be able to use anymore for certain reasons. So I tried to keep them hydrated as well as I could. I went on a trip for a week and found most of the colony dead including the queen. This was pretty sad to me since it was my first Pogonomyrmex Occidentalis colony but little did I know that in a few months I would get a new Occidentalis colony. A few months later in a trade with a friend I managed to trade some Novomessor colony's with 1-2 nanitics for a Myrmecocystus Navajo queen and a Pogonomyrmex Occidentalis colony! They were doing great at first but then they took a small stumble in their growth because I thought that if they went without seeds for a week they'd be fine. I was very much wrong. They didn't want to touch the crickets I gave them. So then I decided I had to take matters into my own hands. I went to Ace Hardware to buy some sunflower seeds and deshelled some when I got home. I put a tiny piece in and they went "nuts" over them! They instantly picked one up and brought it over to the brood and the other 5 workers followed suit. So finally they began taking my crickets again, the larvae stopped dying and were developing quickly, and the queen laid an absurd amount of eggs for just 6 workers. In total the queen layed around 26 eggs!
Now, lets get to the Pogonomyrmex Rugosus queen! I caught her sometime in July or August this year after a gustnado or an actual very small tornado passed through my street. I caught by the end of August around 5. All had laid eggs but only one layed them and managed to keep them alive. The others ate theirs and died. This queen had a rough start. I don't know if it's just that my area is home to semi claustral Pogonomyrmex Rugosus but her eggs didn't develop until I gave her a cricket. To this day I'm still baffled as to why it seems like my Pogonomyrmex Rugosus in my area seem to be semi claustral when it is said through multiple ant keepers I've spoken to that Rugosus are fully claustral. But, That's besides the point. Today she has 2 big larvae that are close to pupation and 2 eggs. She's been a very nice ant queen to keep and is very calm even with vibrations.
These pictures are from the colonies today.
Edited by NicholasP, January 4 2022 - 6:57 PM.