This queen was caught in my backyard under a boundary rope in my garden. She is about 1 cm.
I seem to be unable to upload images directly to the post
Edited by Arrowscotch, March 4 2017 - 5:55 PM.
This queen was caught in my backyard under a boundary rope in my garden. She is about 1 cm.
I seem to be unable to upload images directly to the post
Edited by Arrowscotch, March 4 2017 - 5:55 PM.
I don't believe this one picture is good enough.
Maybe a-------- Crematogaster?
I don't believe this one picture is good enough.
There are 3 pics there.
Maybe a-------- Crematogaster?
I don't believe this one picture is good enough.
There are 3 pics there.
Certainly not Crematogaster. Postpetiole is absent. I myself would say Formica but I'm not hot on IDs.
Edited by Nathant2131, March 4 2017 - 5:43 PM.
Maybe a-------- Crematogaster?
I don't believe this one picture is good enough.
There are 3 pics there.
Certainly not Crematogaster. Postpetiole is absent. I myself would say Formica but I'm not hot on IDs.
oh! I see that now.
This queen was actually the first to die in my test tube setup since I started, so i decided to immortalize her.
I think it might be formica fusca.
I came up with a little list of possible species :
Formica hewitti
Formica lasioides
Formica podzolica
Formica subaenescens
Formica subcyanea
Edited by Arrowscotch, March 4 2017 - 6:36 PM.
Please embed your photos.
Hit "Like This" if it helped.
Maybe a-------- Crematogaster?
I don't believe this one picture is good enough.
There are 3 pics there.
Certainly not Crematogaster. Postpetiole is absent. I myself would say Formica but I'm not hot on IDs.
Yeah, Crematogaster are Myrmicinae with 2 petiole nodes, therefore this isn't Crematogaster as it only has 1.
Ant Keeping & Ethology Discord - 2000+ Members and growing
Statesideants.com - order live ants legally in the US
0 members, 1 guests, 0 anonymous users