Yall are awesome thanks! Can you tell me what made you choose such a specific species? From what I'm reading that's a fire ant and they have a reddish hue, this one seems much darker.
Solenopsis richteri is a species similar to S. invicta, except it's black rather than red. When S. richteri was introduced to the US it hybridized with S. invicta. This hybrid is now found in Tennessee, the northern halves of Mississippi, Alabama, and Georgia, and the eastern bit of Arkansas. Within the areas that it occurs it's pretty common.
The hybrid is pretty recognizable since it's a lot darker than normal invicta, and workers (especially majors) often have large orange spots on the front of the gaster. This darker color and orange spots also applies to regular non-hybridized richteri, but it's still safe to say that this is the hybrid. This is because pure richteri barely exists in the US anymore, if at all, due to them all hybridizing with the usually more abundant S. invicta.
Edited by Mettcollsuss, June 17 2021 - 11:42 AM.