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Neivamyrmex sp. Male

army ant sausage fly neivamyrmex male male ant blacklight

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16 replies to this topic

#1 Offline Gregory2455 - Posted July 13 2015 - 4:35 PM

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I found two of these on my black light last night- pretty cool.

Album:

 

http://www.formicult...10-neivamyrmex/

 


Edited by Gregory2455, July 13 2015 - 4:38 PM.

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#2 Offline dspdrew - Posted July 13 2015 - 5:11 PM

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Very sausage-like. :)


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#3 Offline Gregory2455 - Posted July 13 2015 - 5:16 PM

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Very sausage-like. :)

Most definitely.



#4 Offline Wamdar - Posted July 13 2015 - 6:22 PM

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Sausage fly!


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#5 Offline Gregory2455 - Posted July 16 2015 - 3:51 AM

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#6 Offline WeatherAnt - Posted July 16 2015 - 6:54 PM

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Do these ants have large nuptial flights? Or do males just turn up randomly?



#7 Offline Alza - Posted July 16 2015 - 7:49 PM

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Only the males fly. 


Since they are army ants.


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#8 Offline Gregory2455 - Posted July 16 2015 - 7:54 PM

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Do these ants have large nuptial flights? Or do males just turn up randomly?

During the summer months colonies release males in a constant, but thin stream.



#9 Offline LC3 - Posted July 16 2015 - 9:15 PM

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How do army ants found colonies than?



#10 Offline Alza - Posted July 16 2015 - 9:19 PM

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When queens mate, they split off from the colony and take a decent amount of workers with them.



#11 Offline Gregory2455 - Posted July 17 2015 - 3:10 AM

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How do army ants found colonies than?


The original queen makes a few queens and the colony divides up by queen. After dividing, males will mate with the new queens.

#12 Offline dspdrew - Posted July 17 2015 - 6:25 AM

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I thought I heard that sometimes new males will infiltrate an established colony and mate with the queen.



#13 Offline Gregory2455 - Posted July 17 2015 - 10:33 PM

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I thought I heard that sometimes new males will infiltrate an established colony and mate with the queen.

That too.



#14 Offline gcsnelling - Posted July 18 2015 - 5:45 AM

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This is most likely N. nigrescens or N. opacithorax. o the best of my knowledge mating occurs in the colony before they bud off.


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#15 Offline WeatherAnt - Posted July 18 2015 - 8:52 AM

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Do these ants have large nuptial flights? Or do males just turn up randomly?

During the summer months colonies release males in a constant, but thin stream.

 

 

Okay, cool, thanks! 



#16 Offline MrILoveTheAnts - Posted July 18 2015 - 5:43 PM

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Do these ants have large nuptial flights? Or do males just turn up randomly?

During the summer months colonies release males in a constant, but thin stream.

 

 

Okay, cool, thanks! 

 

Yes when I was in Arizona, the most we ever had show up at a light at night was 2. A single colony will only divide once a year, twice on a good year. Along with producing lots of males that fly off and do their own thing, they make several new queens. New queens that aren't mated with after a certain time are abandoned or executed the way excess queens in a founding colony are slowly offed. I'm told you can sometimes find abandoned queens hanging out in areas where bivouacs used to be or sometimes along the trail they took, hiding under leaves and such.



#17 Offline Gregory2455 - Posted July 20 2015 - 2:30 AM

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Yes when I was in Arizona, the most we ever had show up at a light at night was 2. 

that's funny because there were exactly two on my black light. :D







Also tagged with one or more of these keywords: army ant, sausage fly, neivamyrmex, male, male ant, blacklight

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