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Tetramorium caespitum hatching time


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#1 Offline ANT-onio - Posted July 29 2023 - 3:45 AM

ANT-onio

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Hi.
After asking here to identify the species of a queen (tetramorium caespitum), I left her alone for a month and asked a friend to check every week, knowing that the eggs would take much longer to develop into adult ants and that during that time I didn't have to feed the queen. However, after just 3 weeks he let me know that black ants were born. Is It unusual or have I Just got wrong information about the hatching time?
They didn't eat for about one week, since he didn't know he had to feed them, but now I'm trying to solve everything. Do you think this can damage the development of the colony?
Thanks

#2 Offline antperson24 - Posted July 29 2023 - 6:27 AM

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Hi.
After asking here to identify the species of a queen (tetramorium caespitum), I left her alone for a month and asked a friend to check every week, knowing that the eggs would take much longer to develop into adult ants and that during that time I didn't have to feed the queen. However, after just 3 weeks he let me know that black ants were born. Is It unusual or have I Just got wrong information about the hatching time?
They didn't eat for about one week, since he didn't know he had to feed them, but now I'm trying to solve everything. Do you think this can damage the development of the colony?
Thanks

This is normal. Were did you get your information? 


 Why keep ants that aren't found in your yard?

There are so many fascinating ants right were you live!

I disagree with the keeping/buying of ants that are not found in your area.

 


#3 Offline ANT-onio - Posted July 29 2023 - 10:13 AM

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I searched on the Internet on different websites.




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