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Boise Foot Hills Anting


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#1 Offline Reacker - Posted August 17 2015 - 1:42 PM

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Went hiking in the Boise Foot Hills this morning. This is right around 5 Mile Creek. I went off path quite a bit as I'm new to the area and couldn't find the official trail until the return trip, so I ended up mostly walking along ridges until I reached the summit of the closest hill high enough to have a treeline. 

 

 

It took quite a while to find any sign of ants, though I did find this horrific thing and a potential mate on the way up the first ridge.

 

 

I'm not exactly sure what these are...some sort of giant cricket. As the day got warmer they became very abundant. Only the males would bother getting out of the way, jumping quickly and chirping quite loudly while doing it. The females would just sit there and assume you weren't there to eat them. I wonder if they're extremely toxic as it was hard not to notice them. 

 

Then I found these fellows!

 

 

The picture is kind of poor, but you can see the much larger female and two prospective suitors (I think). You can also see the zig-zag webbing that I remember reading keeps birds from flying through. 

 

Finally some ants!

 

 

Though it took about an hour before it got warm enough to see any activity.

 

 

On the same mound I also found some tiny Pheidole pilfering debris. I'm not sure if it was seeds, sticks, rocks, or insect fragments. 

 

 

 

I also must have just missed some flights by a few days or a week or two. This looks like the same kind of debris pattern that Pogonomyrmex queens make and I found several of them around. Could also be some other random insect though and I didn't bring a shovel to check. 

 

 

A couple more ridges up, I spotted something in the grass.

 

 

Boot for scale. Kind of hard to tell but it's about  1.5 feet tall.

 

 

 

Of course with any mound building Formica in the desert, looking around in the bushes usually pays off. This was about 20 feet away from the nest. 

 

 

 

Also observed but not photographed well enough: a small nest of some Aphaenogaster species, a squat and grey Formica species, and finally small black Crematogaster. 

 

I had been hoping to find Myrmecocystus, but I suspect I'll have to go to the flatter valley floor to find them. At least the hike won't involve large changes in elevation. 

 

 

 


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#2 Offline LC3 - Posted August 17 2015 - 1:45 PM

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I think I found a similar looking black cricket thing in my yard. it was half dying and pretty small.



#3 Offline dspdrew - Posted August 17 2015 - 1:54 PM

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Very nice. I'm not used to seeing mound-building Formica anywhere but high elevation pine forests where I'm from.



#4 Offline Gregory2455 - Posted August 17 2015 - 8:03 PM

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Really cool! What is that Pogonomyrmex species?



#5 Offline kellakk - Posted August 17 2015 - 9:09 PM

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Awesome! I think the cricket may be a mormon cricket.  Those foothills look so similar to those here in southern California (but much less disturbed)!


Current Species:
Camponotus fragilis

Novomessor cockerelli

Pogonomyrmex montanus

Pogonomyrmex rugosus

Manica bradleyi

 

 


#6 Offline Foogoo - Posted August 18 2015 - 3:13 PM

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Excellent pictures, thanks for sharing!


Camponotus vicinus, Crematogaster 1, Crematogaster 2, Formica francoeuri, *, *, Myrmecocystus testaceus, Novomessor cockerelli, Pheidole hyatti, Pogonomyrmex californicus, Pogonomyrmex rugosus, Solenopsis invicta


#7 Offline Reacker - Posted August 18 2015 - 5:18 PM

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Thanks for the positive reception guys! My photography skills are pretty bad, so I'm pleasantly surprised on how the photos turned out. 

 

I don't know for sure what species those Pogonomyrmex are. I suspect P. occidentalis as they're very common here, but I did not collect samples and in any case decided years ago that I found keying out ant species to be tedious and boring without a stereoscope that is simply not in my budget right now. 

 

Those crickets do indeed seem to be Mormon Crickets of a particularly black variety. 

 

https://en.wikipedia.../Mormon_cricket

 

When I first saw them I thought, "Is this a mormon cricket or possibly a cicada?" Before I had seen a multitude of them I decided cicada and then I wasn't sure after I saw a lot of them. According to Wikipedia, which is of course always reliable, they're actually cicadas! As well, not only are they apparently not toxic at all or at least tolerably so for many animals such that even native americans would eat them! I'm tempted to fry some up and see for myself......They also did not hesitate to cannibalize each other. I found quite a few roadkill crickets being consumed by others. 

 

I also found out that Google Maps is not reliable all of the time. I could not find the trail I had set out for because Maps deposited me nearly half a mile down the road into another gulch instead! The trail I found on the return was also not my intended trail, but it worked well enough. Here's my rough route with the black dots on the bottom being my intended route on the left and my actual starting point on the right. 

 

 

I'm a couch potato math major so the 1800 foot climb in a bit more than 2 miles kicked my butt pretty bad. 

 

Here's a bonus Australia Mantis.

 


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#8 Offline PTAntFan - Posted August 18 2015 - 5:31 PM

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Really cool.  I've never observed ants working aphids in the wild. 


PTAntFan----------------------------------Pogonomyrmex Californicus*****************************<p>I use the $3 Tower I made up. See it here.

#9 Offline Foogoo - Posted August 19 2015 - 9:40 AM

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I'm a couch potato math major so the 1800 foot climb in a bit more than 2 miles kicked my butt pretty bad. 

I love math, but couldn't (and still can't) wrap my head around abstract algebra. Same with number theory, love reading about it but can't come up with anything on my own. I'm just a spectator for now.  :sore:


Camponotus vicinus, Crematogaster 1, Crematogaster 2, Formica francoeuri, *, *, Myrmecocystus testaceus, Novomessor cockerelli, Pheidole hyatti, Pogonomyrmex californicus, Pogonomyrmex rugosus, Solenopsis invicta


#10 Offline James C. Trager - Posted August 27 2015 - 4:30 AM

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Nice sampling of the ants around there. That is really Formica-land, so as you explore more, you're likely to find several other species, including slavemakers.



#11 Offline Miles - Posted November 3 2015 - 8:20 PM

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Woohoo! Another Idahoan!


PhD Student & NSF Graduate Research Fellow | University of Florida Dept. of Entomology & Nematology - Lucky Ant Lab 

 

Founder & Director of The Ant Network. Ant keeper since 2009. Insect ecologist and science communicator. He/Him.


#12 Offline Miles - Posted November 3 2015 - 8:21 PM

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The Pogonomyrmex are either P. salinas or P. occidentalis.


PhD Student & NSF Graduate Research Fellow | University of Florida Dept. of Entomology & Nematology - Lucky Ant Lab 

 

Founder & Director of The Ant Network. Ant keeper since 2009. Insect ecologist and science communicator. He/Him.





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