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dangerous foods or ingredients for ants


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12 replies to this topic

#1 Online mete - Posted September 5 2024 - 11:26 AM

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Apart from pesticides that raw plant foods might have, is there anything or a list of things that are dangerous or fatal to ants which they would eat (not avoid, they would not sense the danger) ? Like certain spices, or something used in food preparation for human consumption (natural or additives/Exxx things etc.)

#2 Offline IdioticMouse26 - Posted September 5 2024 - 12:16 PM

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Some honey might contain pesticides. Because bees forage from flowers that has pesticides and make honey out of them. 


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#3 Online GOCAMPONOTUS - Posted September 5 2024 - 12:23 PM

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Fruit is a big one.


Currently keeping: 2 C.vicinus colonies.2 C.sansabeanus. 1 C.leavissimus. 2 C.Ca02. 1 V.pergandei. 4 T.immigrans.1 F.pacifica. 1 C.hyatti

1 M.ergatognya

 

 

 

 

Trying to get my hands on :C.modoc,A.vercicolor, and Any Honeypots

  

 

 


#4 Online ANTdrew - Posted September 5 2024 - 12:32 PM

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Ants are incredibly tough survivors. They dominate all terrestrial habitats for a reason. Other than pesticides, there is nothing else I would worry about.
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"The ants are a people not strong, yet they prepare their meat in the summer." Prov. 30:25
Keep ordinary ants in extraordinary ways.

#5 Offline rptraut - Posted September 5 2024 - 3:18 PM

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Hello mete;

There are some foods that aren’t harmful to eat, but in large enough amounts can still pose a threat to ants. I’ve had ants drown in water, sugar/water, and although I’ve never fed it, I can see my small ants getting stuck in honey and dying.

I’ve often wondered about feeding cured ham to ants because of the salt content. I don’t feed it for that reason. I understand that ants, like most creatures, require some salt but I think mine get some from the other meat products I feed, many of which come from my dinner plate and are seasoned to my taste with salt. Does anyone have experience feeding cured ham and have you had any problems at all with salt?
RPT

Edited by rptraut, September 5 2024 - 4:03 PM.

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My father always said I had ants in my pants.

#6 Offline rptraut - Posted September 6 2024 - 3:42 AM

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Hello Everyone;

 

I added this question as an edit to the above post, I'm reposting it to hopefully get some responses and learn from others' experiences.   

 

I’ve often wondered about feeding cured ham to ants because of the salt content. I don’t feed it for that reason. I understand that ants, like most creatures, require some salt but I think mine get some from the other meat products I feed, many of which come from my dinner plate and are seasoned to my taste with salt. Does anyone have experience feeding cured ham and have you had any problems at all with salt?

RPT


My father always said I had ants in my pants.

#7 Offline Ernteameise - Posted September 6 2024 - 3:58 AM

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Hello Everyone;

 

I added this question as an edit to the above post, I'm reposting it to hopefully get some responses and learn from others' experiences.   

 

I’ve often wondered about feeding cured ham to ants because of the salt content. I don’t feed it for that reason. I understand that ants, like most creatures, require some salt but I think mine get some from the other meat products I feed, many of which come from my dinner plate and are seasoned to my taste with salt. Does anyone have experience feeding cured ham and have you had any problems at all with salt?

RPT

I have been feeding it on occasion as a treat. Maybe once in 8-9 weeks? Not very often.

My ants love it, but like you said, the salt content is a concern.

However, I always provide plenty of water, so if the ants become thirsty, then they can drink.

So far, I have not observed any ill effects, there were no die-offs or any other issues which I saw.

Of course I cannot judge if the ants got a mild belly ache from it.


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#8 Online mete - Posted September 6 2024 - 10:08 AM

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Ants are incredibly tough survivors. They dominate all terrestrial habitats for a reason. Other than pesticides, there is nothing else I would worry about.

 

Good point. I think this means (apart from pesticide use) most if not all of the natural food in normal quantities should be OK, or they would avoid it anyway.

 

 

Hello Everyone;

 

I added this question as an edit to the above post, I'm reposting it to hopefully get some responses and learn from others' experiences.   

 

I’ve often wondered about feeding cured ham to ants because of the salt content. I don’t feed it for that reason. I understand that ants, like most creatures, require some salt but I think mine get some from the other meat products I feed, many of which come from my dinner plate and are seasoned to my taste with salt. Does anyone have experience feeding cured ham and have you had any problems at all with salt?

RPT

I have been feeding it on occasion as a treat. Maybe once in 8-9 weeks? Not very often.

My ants love it, but like you said, the salt content is a concern.

However, I always provide plenty of water, so if the ants become thirsty, then they can drink.

So far, I have not observed any ill effects, there were no die-offs or any other issues which I saw.

Of course I cannot judge if the ants got a mild belly ache from it.

 

 

Good example. To elaborate the second part of my question, about the foods prepared for human consumption, some points I can think of:

 

- none or only some ingredients in a prepared food might be organic/bio in nature. not sure if this means it can contain minute levels of pesticides, and if it does, if it is a large enough quantity to cause a problem for the ants.

- it may contain some minerals/spices or in large quantities, like the extra salt in cured ham.

- it may contain artificial additives, Exx type of stuff.



#9 Online AntsGodzilla - Posted September 6 2024 - 2:11 PM

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Apart from pesticides that raw plant foods might have, is there anything or a list of things that are dangerous or fatal to ants which they would eat (not avoid, they would not sense the danger) ? Like certain spices, or something used in food preparation for human consumption (natural or additives/Exxx things etc.)

watch out for sodium, and things that easily ferment, and too much grease on meat


I keep:

(angry) Pogonomyrmex Rugosus,
(stubborn) Myrmecocystus Deplisis
Tetramorium Immigrans
Monomorium Minimum

And many Carnivorous plants such as:

Dionea (fly trap)

Sarracenia x 'Fiona' ( American Pitcher plant)

Nepenthese ventrata (Tropical Pitcher plant

Pinguicula agnata x emarginata (Butterwort) 


#10 Offline Ernteameise - Posted September 7 2024 - 12:37 AM

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Ants are incredibly tough survivors. They dominate all terrestrial habitats for a reason. Other than pesticides, there is nothing else I would worry about.

 

Good point. I think this means (apart from pesticide use) most if not all of the natural food in normal quantities should be OK, or they would avoid it anyway.

 

 

Hello Everyone;

 

I added this question as an edit to the above post, I'm reposting it to hopefully get some responses and learn from others' experiences.   

 

I’ve often wondered about feeding cured ham to ants because of the salt content. I don’t feed it for that reason. I understand that ants, like most creatures, require some salt but I think mine get some from the other meat products I feed, many of which come from my dinner plate and are seasoned to my taste with salt. Does anyone have experience feeding cured ham and have you had any problems at all with salt?

RPT

I have been feeding it on occasion as a treat. Maybe once in 8-9 weeks? Not very often.

My ants love it, but like you said, the salt content is a concern.

However, I always provide plenty of water, so if the ants become thirsty, then they can drink.

So far, I have not observed any ill effects, there were no die-offs or any other issues which I saw.

Of course I cannot judge if the ants got a mild belly ache from it.

 

 

Good example. To elaborate the second part of my question, about the foods prepared for human consumption, some points I can think of:

 

- none or only some ingredients in a prepared food might be organic/bio in nature. not sure if this means it can contain minute levels of pesticides, and if it does, if it is a large enough quantity to cause a problem for the ants.

- it may contain some minerals/spices or in large quantities, like the extra salt in cured ham.

- it may contain artificial additives, Exx type of stuff.

 

I think another problem might be antibiotics.

In commercial agriculture, antibiotics are a stable in many animal feeds.

This has 2 reasons:

1. Commercial industrial animal production is not natural and due to stress and overcrowding, there is hardly any immune system left, so the animals will become sick. Best to feed antibiotics to cancel that out!

2. Antibiotics work directly on the gut (mostly by destroying the natural microbiome of good bacteria) and since no good vital bacteria have to be fed (they have all been killed) this energy can go to the animal to fatten it up faster

There have been studies in humans, for example, that treatment with antibiotics and the following destruction of the natural microbiome can lead to dysbiosis, changed metabolism and obesity.

 

What does this have to do with ants?

 

If you buy NON-ORGANIC meat, fish or eggs to feed to your ants, there will be antibiotics in there.

In studies with ants, it has been found that if you mix antibiotics in ant food, that the vital endosymbiotic bacteria in the ant gut will be killed. This can, in the worst case, make the ants starve in front of the filled food dishes. Reason, they need the endosymbiotic bacteria to digest food. You might have seen on this forum that some people here feed uric acid and bird poop to ants (Camponotus). This works, because the endosymbiotic bacteria in the Camponotus gut can synthesize amino acids from of uric acid.

 

Long story short: if you feed things like cured ham as a treat to your ants, just make sure it is organic.


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#11 Offline OhNoNotAgain - Posted September 12 2024 - 11:40 AM

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JFYI in all the posts about "my ants died after I gave them ____" ... it's usually been honey or apple. I suspect pesticides and would never give any part of an apple with peel still on unless I grew it myself. As for honey, it's often laundered and comes from shady overseas suppliers ... and even if local you have no idea where the bees got stuff from.


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Formiculture Journals::

Veromessor pergandei, andrei; Novomessor cockerelli

Camponotus fragilis; also separate journal: Camponotus sansabeanus (inactive), vicinus, laevigatus/quercicola

Liometopum occidentale;  Prenolepis imparis; Myrmecocystus mexicanus (inactive)

Pogonomyrmex subnitidus and californicus (inactive)

Tetramorium sp.

Termites: Zootermopsis angusticollis

 

Isopods: A. gestroi, granulatum, kluugi, maculatum, vulgare; C. murina; P. hoffmannseggi, P. haasi, P. ornatus; V. parvus

Spoods: Phidippus sp.


#12 Offline jabasson - Posted Yesterday, 9:56 PM

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If you removed the peel of the apple would you always be safe? Also curious if anyone has had ants die from pesticides in hummingbird nectar.



#13 Offline rptraut - Posted Today, 12:34 AM

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Hello Everyone;

I keep honeybees and I belong to a “Bee Club”. Last meeting we discussed how to protect hives from higher than normal overwinter death losses. The causes haven’t been an easy thing to determine, but pesticides in the honey have been implicated. I was told by one older member that I should extract all the honey from each hive and then feed sugar syrup to the hives for winter, guaranteed no pesticide exposure.

If beekeepers are dubious about the safety of honey for their bees, ant keepers would be wise to be similarly cautious about feeding honey to their ants.
RPT
My father always said I had ants in my pants.




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