Hey there! Was thinking about starting a journal on this anyway, might as well make it public. First about me, I am not very experienced at all at keeping ants. I have a Camponotus Discolor colony that is about 60 workers strong that I really enjoy watching. Other than that, I have zero experience, I fell into this on accident and now I'm addicted lol.
Backstory on my Neoponera Villosa (Texas Bullet Ant). I found them in mid October in South Texas. I quickly did research and asked around on Facebook about identification and care guides. I settled on tubs and tubes. I originally found 4 queens so I paired them up. The wife and kids had the honor of naming them. The first pair being Elsa and Anna. The second pair being Samuelina L Jackson and Olof. They took FOREVER to lay any eggs. So I'll start the journal today.
December 31, 2023
Elsa&Anna- Together they have 5 eggs and 3 larva at this point. The most weird behavior they portray is that they don't really hunt. They accept dead pray, but as soon as I introduce live cricket they defend their tube but do not attack. I don't know why that is.
Samuelina&Olof- They ate their eggs unfortunately, they started to develop pretty bad mold in their tube so I moved them into a mini harth and an out world being that I saw someone do that on YouTube. I just did this December 29, 2023. So I'll post it anything happens there.
Feb 3, 2024 UPDATE
Anna/Elsa: We have 1 cocoon and 1 larvae getting ready! Should have our first worker very soon. The cocoon has been here for about 5 days so far. Also have a new batch of eggs it looks like.
Samuelina/Olof: No eggs or anything. Don't think we are gonna get anything here guys.
Feb 6th, 2024- NOTE
Anna/Elsa: Very interesting thing I noticed. So, I put pure honey in a very shallow 3D printed disc. Over the past 2 weeks, I've been having to refill their water dish more often then normal. Well going through and cleaning their tubs and tubes set up, I bumped their honey dish and too my surpise, it was almost water viscosity! My best guess is they are actually adding water to their honey! Just a fun little thing I've come across.
Edited by RathalosGR, February 6 2024 - 6:02 PM.