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My ant mite problem!


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8 replies to this topic

#1 Offline evanmancini2011 - Posted September 20 2024 - 11:34 AM

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So yesterday I posted about my Crematogaster ant colony brood not developing but I realized it just had to do with the temperature they were kept at! But know I have been seeing these white and red mites on the ant queens of this colony. There are only about 10 to 6 but they only are on the ant queens not the workers. Does anyone have any tips on how to get rid of these mites? I heard a sliced lemon might work but just like the queens the mites don't leave the test tube and are always on them. Should I still put a lemon in the test tube? And does anyone know what species this could be?

Here is a picture of the mites I saw. 

Thank you!

IMG_1254.jpg

IMG_1255.jpg



#2 Offline ANTdrew - Posted September 20 2024 - 12:08 PM

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You will need to order predatory mites from Nature’s Good Guys, a biological control company. Hypoaspis miles is a good species to start with. They are pricey, but highly effective. I’ve never tried the lemon thing. It sounds like an urban legend to me, to be honest.
"The ants are a people not strong, yet they prepare their meat in the summer." Prov. 30:25
Keep ordinary ants in extraordinary ways.

#3 Offline AntsGodzilla - Posted September 20 2024 - 1:23 PM

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I think AntsCanada used lemon


 

And many Carnivorous plants such as: Dionea muscipula (fly trap), Sarracenia x 'Fiona' ( American Pitcher plant), Nepenthese ventrata (Tropical Pitcher plant), and Pinguicula agnata x emarginata (Butterwort) (show off your plants here)

Godzilla thread

Go to the ant, you sluggard; consider its ways and be wise! It has no commander, no overseer or ruler, yet it stores it's provisions in summer and gathers its food at harvest. Proverbs 6: 6-8

 

Myrmecocystus depilis

 


#4 Offline OwlThatLikesAnts - Posted September 20 2024 - 1:25 PM

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You will need to order predatory mites from Nature’s Good Guys, a biological control company. Hypoaspis miles is a good species to start with. They are pricey, but highly effective. I’ve never tried the lemon thing. It sounds like an urban legend to me, to be honest.

To be real it is/it is not, cuz some keepers say it works but most of the time only a few or none work, there is also the formic acid way, but that is hard, another way is to dunk the ants in water, it works, but they might get stressed and eat the larva. I am not aware of any other way to do it but there is probably other ways.


Currently keeping:

 

1x Formica subsericea, (used to be polygynous) 15+ workers with 4 pupa (Idk why they still have)

1x Lasius umbratus, (Workers accepted) 5+ workers with host brood

1x Ponera pennsylvanica, just queen

 

As you watch your ants march, remember: every journey begins with a single step (or queen)-not just towards you, but towards a future woven by diligence and shared dreams - Me

 

(I lost braincells just to make this quote)


#5 Offline evanmancini2011 - Posted September 20 2024 - 2:44 PM

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You will need to order predatory mites from Nature’s Good Guys, a biological control company. Hypoaspis miles is a good species to start with. They are pricey, but highly effective. I’ve never tried the lemon thing. It sounds like an urban legend to me, to be honest.

ANTdrew, if I looked at the mites on this store you told me about! If I order them do I just dump them into the outworld?

 

Thank You



#6 Offline ANTdrew - Posted September 20 2024 - 3:39 PM

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They need substrate to do their life cycle, so I just put a small container of damp soil in the outworld with the mites in it.
"The ants are a people not strong, yet they prepare their meat in the summer." Prov. 30:25
Keep ordinary ants in extraordinary ways.

#7 Offline evanmancini2011 - Posted September 20 2024 - 4:05 PM

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Ok thank you so much!



#8 Offline jabasson - Posted September 21 2024 - 9:50 AM

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How likely is it for colonies to fully recover from something like this? Do predatory mites actually do a good job of eating every single mite egg before they die out? I don't have a mite problem but I'm just curious how bad it is if I notice them in the future.



#9 Offline ANTdrew - Posted September 21 2024 - 1:20 PM

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My experience is that they do eliminate all undesirable mites. In an enclosed formicarium, they eat up all the mites, then die off.
  • rptraut, AntsGodzilla and jabasson like this
"The ants are a people not strong, yet they prepare their meat in the summer." Prov. 30:25
Keep ordinary ants in extraordinary ways.




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