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Oakland County, Michigan, 8/21/2022

ant id michigan oakland county

Best Answer madbiologist , August 23 2022 - 1:57 PM

The all brownish one is a claustral Lasius species, probably neoniger at this time of year. Will need more/better pictures of the one with the red head for an ID, but possibly a parasite sp.

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7 replies to this topic

#1 Offline Ant234 - Posted August 22 2022 - 7:57 AM

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1. I have found this outside near my apartments around 7:15 - 7:30
2. 8/21/22
3. Urban area is the habitat
4. length: around 1.5 centimeters
5. One is bright reddish orange near the middle plus the head and other wise brownish, and the other one is all brownish
6. Behavior both were a bit active when I first put them in, then calmed down slowly
7. I have a feeling that one of them is semi-parasitic, but I don't really know

Pics:

https://media.discor...=497&height=662

https://media.discor...=497&height=662

https://media.discor...=497&height=662

https://media.discor...=497&height=662

 

Sorry that the pics are from discord lol but I took pics on a different device than the one that I am posting with.



#2 Offline Manitobant - Posted August 22 2022 - 9:49 AM

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We need much better pics. I can barely see the queens.

#3 Offline FinWins - Posted August 22 2022 - 10:10 AM

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We need much better pics. I can barely see the queens.

Same


I keep: C. modoc, C. sansabeanus  :D, C. maritimus, Formica argentea, M. mexicanus  :D, Odontomachus brunneus :D, Pogonomyrmex californicus, Pogonomyrmex rugosus, 

 


#4 Offline Ant234 - Posted August 22 2022 - 2:41 PM

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ok, but i put them in a dark place, and is it ok if i take them out again?



#5 Offline Manitobant - Posted August 23 2022 - 8:26 AM

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Yes

#6 Offline madbiologist - Posted August 23 2022 - 1:57 PM   Best Answer

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The all brownish one is a claustral Lasius species, probably neoniger at this time of year. Will need more/better pictures of the one with the red head for an ID, but possibly a parasite sp.



#7 Offline Ant234 - Posted August 24 2022 - 7:25 AM

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Ok thanks



#8 Offline Ajoe92 - Posted August 30 2022 - 2:31 PM

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From my very limited knowledge and experiece I found out this:

Semi-parasitic Lasius sp. tend to be very active, to the point that they make you feel bad for putting them in a test tube.
Their head is larger or equal in width with their thorax.
Their gaster is usually not as big and bulky as claustral species.
Claustral Lasius - big round gaster + thorax is larger than their head. Head is generally smaller.
Semi-parasitic Lasius - smaller and more streamlined gaster + thorax = head. Head is larger with large mandibles.


They both seem claustral Lasius to me, specially if they both calmed down.
My semi-parasitic queen ( L. fuliginosus I believe) was Speedy Gonzales until I gave her workers to adopt.

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