Right.
Since I still do not dare to spend a small fortune on honeypot ants (I am from Germany where they are worth their weight in gold) and they are known to be more difficult to keep anyways, especially in the founding stage....
Well, I looked on the most popular German trading website, and there are many different ant species from all over the world for sale (for a high price!), including bullet ants, Australian bull ants, leaf-cutters.... you name it. Then I saw an offer for a small Asian harvester species, which I already had admired 1 year ago, when another member on here shared pictures.
These ants are soooo cute!
Plus, the colony on offer was in my budget range!
So yay, I am now the proud owner of a colony of Acanthomyrmex sp.
The seller was not sure which species, but they were collected in Thailand and he is pretty sure it is Acanthomyrmex thailandensis.
As you might have realized, I am into harvester ants- and this was one of my dream species!
Not much known is about them, the species was only just discovered 30 years ago.
This was even after Mark Moffet wrote his paper on the genus (this is why they are not mentioned), which can be found here:
https://www.antwiki....offet_1986c.pdf
I have not found many journals and information about them online- so my goal is to write a nice journal reporting everything like I do for my other colonies.
For better or for worse- even if I make mistakes and things go wrong, this will also be valuable information for me to share.
In previous reports about them (and after I asked in my Facebook group), people were saying that:
"This species is a nice eye-candy, but VERY boring. They just sit around and do nothing."
(well, same as my Camponotus to be honest....)
These ants form small colonies of around 50- 200 workers.
They are nocturnal (so I will not expect massive action during the day) and they are not very active in general, with a short active range - which means they do not need a massive outworld.
All in all- they do not require a lot of space, so are perfect for people like me living in a small flat.
They come from the Asian tropical rainforest.
They nest in twigs and leaf-litter, they are not a digging species.
They are specialized harvesters of fig seed, and for cracking these, they have these massive amazing cute majors.
They will also take chia and other small seed, sugar water, honey and small insects.
The Antstore did a video on them, and they keep them in a cork nest.
So I decided to put my small colony also in a cork nest, and since everyone is happy with Wakooshi, I thought I order the small complete set from them with a cork nest.
https://www.wakooshi...ll-complete-set
Sadly, the delivery is now stuck in German customs. (my luck....)
So the colony arrived before the nest arrived (this did not go as planned), so I just put them into a preliminary housing.
I added some moist vermiculite and the heat cable is attached to the side.
For the future, if the colony grows, I also already have a plan, I ordered a Ready-To-Ship bifurcated Mini Hearth from Tarheel, which is already on the way (and probably will also be stuck in customs, I know my luck).
Anyways, we will see how the colony develops and how I do with keeping my first advanced species!
I am VERY excited.
Here they are:
The colony is at around 30 workers at the moment
Look at these beautiful majors!
They already come with some brood:
The preliminary housing- the colony is still living in their test tube (covered with a toilet paper cardboard)
I bought some organic figs to get at some fig seed
I offered them a cricket, some chia seed and some fig seeds in a dried fig (plus some fluffy dandelion seed)
We already have some exploration!
And the ants are drinking some sunburst nectar
Right, now I hope that customs is finished soon with their searching of my Wakooshi parcel, so that these girls can go into their small starter home for the time being.
Wish me luck!
Edited by Ernteameise, April 17 2024 - 11:13 AM.