Hello, everyone; I'm new to this forum and anting/antkeeping. I'm currently browsing prebuilt formicariums and keeping my eyes peeled for queens while I'm out walking. I caught an interesting ant earlier today, and I was hoping you guys could help me identify it.
It was caught in my front yard, in Statesboro, Georgia, on 9/27/2016.
I caught her in a small, sandy area next to my cracked concrete driveway. There are trees and lots of leaf litter on the other side of the driveway, but the side she was on was somewhat barren (sand, dead leaves, some grass, acorns everywhere).
I don't have a ruler, but the images I've taken of her have her test tube directly on top of my keyboard; I hope this helps with judging her size. She's a little larger than the smallest Solenopsis Invicta/fire ant workers I have elsewhere in my yard.
She's a dull rust color with a completely smooth-looking exoskeleton. Her eyes are small and black; they're directly behind her mandibles, which are shaped like two interlocking Js. Her gaster is almost completely round, and it looks like she has wing scars on her thorax.
I didn't see any other ants that looked similar to her. There were some skinny, fast orange ants with small, orange-yellow, sandy nest holes nearby, and some scattered tiny black ants coming out of holes with grey piles around them. I also caught one ant that looked like a Pheidole major, with a head much larger than its gaster (the entire ant was a little smaller than the one I'm asking about); whatever it was, it played dead until I released it.
I've given her a little sugar water, and she seems to be enjoying it. She lost one of her antennae while I was capturing her, I think, but she doesn't appear to be dying. She's been very still ever since I got her into a tube, though.
I've linked an album that includes my pictures of her and where I caught her. I would've attached the pictures directly to this thread, but I'm not "permitted to upload this kind of file", apparently.
Edited by JFowler, September 27 2016 - 3:38 PM.