I come again with another ant species after my long trek in the swampy lands inhabited by the most ferocious of toads, the most peeping of spring peepers capable of deafening you, and the ghastly Camponotus nearcticus getting ever so near!
Last night when I went searching for some centipedes in the rotten decayed wood my shovel that I use to pry open bark pried open a chamber of an ant species I have never seen before. "I wonder what this is" I said to myself after I put away my shovel. "It's fairly big and a little leggy... Seems to be of a length of exactly 4mm." I thought to myself after measuring and then I decided to see if I could remember where I saw something similar looking in the past. "Hmm... the only place I seem to remember seeing these workers and queen was when I was browsing around at Canada-Ants Ant store... Could it be Leptothorax canadensis? But the workers have this strange caramel like color at their thorax... I must send pictures to my friends for help!" and so I did. And the answer that came back shattered me... And I quote exactly what was said between me and my friends...
Friend 1: Why does that almost look like tetramorium
Me: I don't know. I thought the same thing at first too.
Friend 2: Myrmica
Me: Are you sure...?
Friend 2: Yes.
And that was the story... A very sad one really... And then I asked them what species of myrmica it was and guess what was said. "I have no idea and probably neither does anyone else because IDing Myrmica is a mess. None of the keys make sense, every species is variable, and the genus is a taxonomic mess as is. And so that's why I'm leaving this journal as "NicholasP's Firmica Myrmica sp." And for those wondering I just put Firmica in the title to rhyme with Myrmica and because they're staying firm despite having lost 1 of their 2 queens.
Ok. With that over I'll stop goofing around and post the pictures.
Edited by NicholasP, April 29 2022 - 7:26 AM.