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Myrmecocystus nest size question
Started By
Katakros8
, Mar 2 2023 12:50 PM
10 replies to this topic
#1 Offline - Posted March 2 2023 - 12:50 PM
As the title says I'm going to be getting a colony of myrmecocystus soon and was looking at a THAs mini hearth/xl to start with. My question is when selecting species size would they fall under medium or large?
#2 Offline - Posted March 2 2023 - 2:05 PM
How big is the colony?
I keep: C. modoc, C. sansabeanus , C. maritimus, Formica argentea, M. mexicanus , Odontomachus brunneus , Pogonomyrmex californicus, Pogonomyrmex rugosus,
#3 Offline - Posted March 2 2023 - 2:18 PM
It would be a queen and maybe 10-15 workers
#4 Offline - Posted March 3 2023 - 12:13 AM
I usually buy regular mini hearths for mine but an xl mini hearth would work fine
#5 Offline - Posted March 3 2023 - 2:28 AM
Going back to your original question, the species size won’t affect much with a mini-hearth. I would go with medium.As the title says I'm going to be getting a colony of myrmecocystus soon and was looking at a THAs mini hearth/xl to start with. My question is when selecting species size would they fall under medium or large?
"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.
#6 Offline - Posted March 3 2023 - 6:15 AM
Ok that's what I was thinking but I was unsure about medium/large for future expansions
#7 Offline - Posted March 3 2023 - 6:34 AM
This also depends on which myrmecocystus species you're talking about. I have mexicanus and it has been less than a year and I am already looking for a new nest for them. Big open space looks cool but its useless to ants. I definitely recommend the bifurcated mini health to start.
Keeps: Camponotus, Tetra
Wants (Please reach out if you have them for sale if you’re in the US): Acromyrmex Sp., Atta Sp., Cephalotes Sp., Myrmecocystus Sp (Prefer Mexicanus), Odontomachus Sp. (Prefer Desertorum), Pachycondyla Sp., Pheidole Sp (Prefer Rhea. The bigger the better. Not the tiny bicarinata), Pogonomyrmex Sp (Prefer Badius)., Pseudomyrmex Sp. (Prefer the cute yellow ones)
#8 Offline - Posted March 3 2023 - 8:23 AM
Ok that's what I was thinking but I was unsure about medium/large for future expansions
I think for THA the ant size question relates most to the top down view nests. Not about the size of the colony, but the actual size of an individual ant of the species. That indicates how deep down the nest should be cut to accommodate how large of an ant to move around in it. Also might relate to the size of the entrance/exit holes used on any nest.
As a mini-hearth is a side view nest, i believe its chamber size (depth) is basically the same all the time, while something like a fallen fortress top down view would have a deeper or shallower cut to the nest space for a larger or smaller ant size to comfortably occupy.
Tiny ants won't like to much empty space around them, larger ants may be too cramped and unable to maneuver while carrying larvae/pupae/food in a nest.
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#9 Offline - Posted March 3 2023 - 8:33 AM
Ok that's what I was thinking but I was unsure about medium/large for future expansions
If you get an XL, and they grow out of that, I would just attach a second xl. When they grow out of both of those, I think they may be big enough for a fortress. Also, it really comes down to the species because mexicanas would fill up a nest in a shorter time since they are large.
Edited by AntsCali098, March 3 2023 - 8:34 AM.
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Wishlist:
Atta sp (wish they were in CA), Crematogaster cerasi, Most Pheidole species
#10 Offline - Posted March 3 2023 - 10:46 AM
Still deciding on species but I guess at this point I'm most concerned about the port/entrance sizes for expansion/tube connections rather than the size of the nest if that makes sense.
#11 Offline - Posted March 3 2023 - 2:52 PM
Still deciding on species but I guess at this point I'm most concerned about the port/entrance sizes for expansion/tube connections rather than the size of the nest if that makes sense.
If you can you should start with M. mexicanus, their large size makes them the easiest to observe. Or M. placodops they are pretty large too.
I keep: C. modoc, C. sansabeanus , C. maritimus, Formica argentea, M. mexicanus , Odontomachus brunneus , Pogonomyrmex californicus, Pogonomyrmex rugosus,
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