- Formiculture.com
- Forums
- Gallery
- Members
- Member Map
- Chat
Workers or secondary queen?
Started By
FloridaAnts
, Jun 27 2022 10:22 AM
5 replies to this topic
#1 Offline - Posted June 27 2022 - 10:22 AM
Hello! Yesterday, while wandering through a grassy field(some trees and palms, I found a trap jaw ant queen under a piece of rotting wood. That’s not important, what is, is I snapped the stick open looking for brood, but I found two termites. One ivory white, and the other tan with a little grey on it.
Here are some pictures, they are 4-6mm.
Are they a founding pair or workers?(Yes only two were in the stick)
Here are some pictures, they are 4-6mm.
Are they a founding pair or workers?(Yes only two were in the stick)
#2 Offline - Posted June 27 2022 - 11:25 AM
Not reproductives.
"The ants are a people not strong, yet they prepare their meat in the summer." Prov. 30:25
Keep ordinary ants in extraordinary ways.
Keep ordinary ants in extraordinary ways.
#3 Offline - Posted June 27 2022 - 12:12 PM
Not reproductives.
So should I give them to the Odontomachus or can they become reproductives?
#4 Offline - Posted June 27 2022 - 12:21 PM
You want at least 100+ termites including nymphs to try to get secondary reproductives. Just feed these to your ants.
- FloridaAnts likes this
"The ants are a people not strong, yet they prepare their meat in the summer." Prov. 30:25
Keep ordinary ants in extraordinary ways.
Keep ordinary ants in extraordinary ways.
#5 Offline - Posted June 27 2022 - 12:44 PM
Well actually both are secondary reproductive either a nymphoid or an ergatoid, the details of differentiation are requiring closer images of genitalia. This diagnosis is based on the lower individual having clear wing pads while both individuals have wide thoracic regions, wider than generally found in workers. A worker would have a thin waste between the pronotum and mesonotum.
Edited by PurdueEntomology, June 27 2022 - 12:51 PM.
- FloridaAnts likes this
#6 Offline - Posted June 28 2022 - 4:47 AM
Alright, I thought it was suspicious I found these two alone, and happened to be founding on top of two Odontomachus Brunneas queens. Lucky stick… does it matter which if the two they are? Or should I try to get pictures? It would be quite difficult when they are alive…Well actually both are secondary reproductive either a nymphoid or an ergatoid, the details of differentiation are requiring closer images of genitalia. This diagnosis is based on the lower individual having clear wing pads while both individuals have wide thoracic regions, wider than generally found in workers. A worker would have a thin waste between the pronotum and mesonotum.
How should I raise them? In a normal termite setup? My glass tubes are quite large, is plastic tubes okay?(Sorry for all the questions)
And ANTdrew, I caught about 40-50 termite workers in a log. Will this do?
Edited by FloridaAnts, June 28 2022 - 4:51 AM.
1 user(s) are reading this topic
0 members, 1 guests, 0 anonymous users