I currently have two C. chromaoides queens, three C. americanum queens, and one C. castaneus queen, all with varying numbers of workers caught this past May.
I've tried many times in the past to raise these three species, but I've never had success. The queens will usually raise the first workers fine, but after the first or second batch is when things seem to always go wrong.
They always seem to follow the same pattern. The small colonies will eat enthusiastically at first, insects, fruit, sugar water, and the queen will lay more eggs, but on the second or third round of brood, the larvae will become arrested in growth at a very early stage and stay that way. Pupae will die before eclosing, and workers will start refusing to eat no matter what I offer them and slowly die off until only the queen is left with her larvae which refuse to grow. Eventually she goes too. I've never had the population rise over 15 or so before this happens after a few months.
I'm starting to see this pattern developing yet again in this batch of queens. The C. castaneus queen has stopped laying and has a large number of non-growing larvae and a few workers who spend all their time in the nest. One of the C. chromaiodes colonies is starting to show signs of this too. The other is still going strong, but they're pretty near the magic number of 15-20. Not really any deaths yet, but I'm starting to see signs of the "slowdown" in all colonies. None are eating as well as they used to.
Currently they're in test tube nests in tupperware outworlds with a layer of sand in the bottom, and a tube of honey/sugar water in each. No mold in any nests. I offer them insects, fruit, and sugar water, but they're all losing interest in foods they used to love. Why does this keep happening? I haven't hit a point where they need to be hibernated yet. Temp stays in the low 80s/high 70s, plenty of humidity in the boxes.