I have decided to make a journal covering all my ants.
Here are all of my colonies from most to least workers as of 2-21-22 (I will not be including single queens with no workers in this journal. Also, the worker count is an estimate and is usually not exact)
Pheidole navigans 1Q 600w
Apheaenogaster occidentalis 6-8Q 200w
Brachymyrmex patigonicus 6Q 200w
Tetramorium immigrans 1Q 150w
Solenopsis molesta 5-6Q 150w
Brachymyrmex patigonicus 2-3Q 80w
Novomessor cockerelli 1Q 70w
Monomorium floricola 6Q 30w
Pheidole navigans 7-10Q 30w
Camponotus vicius 1Q 8w
Pheidole navigans 1Q 5w
Camponotus sp 1Q 1w
Solenopsis sp 2Q 1w
The only original journal I have for all my ants is my Brachymyrmex patigonicus 6Q 200w colony, journal seen here, although I will still be updating all of them in this journal.
Lets start with the biggest colony. My Pheidole navigans colony with 1 queen and 600 workers. They have been probably my favorite colony for a while and have a long history. I got this colony already established about 3 months ago. They had around 400 workers. I moved them into an aus ants acrylic founding nest. They moved the whole colony overnight so I don't know exactly how long they took. A few weeks later I decided to make a new outworld for them (pictures below). The outworld was made with simply rocks, soil, and sand, a pretty simple but nice looking outworld. They eventually got quite packed in the nest so instead of moving them to a new one, I put a test tube with water in the outworld both for extra nesting space (if needed) and fresh water. A few weeks after that they decided to move in their outworld most likely because the nest was too dry. I watered the nest and they partly moved back, but about half the colony remained in the outworld. They had built a chamber inside the sand, and even put some brood inside the liquid feeder (that was empty at the time). I had never seen a colony do this so it was pretty incredible. A few days later the rest of the ants moved back into the nest. So another month or so went by and I noticed they had fully moved out of their nest into their water test tube (even though the nest was not dry) and stayed like that until a few days ago when they moved back into the nest.
See what I mean by they have had a long history?
The colony when I first got them
Edited by AntsCali098, April 2 2022 - 5:38 PM.