Location: San Juan Loop Trail, Cleveland National Forest, California
Habitat: Oak forest, chaparral
Coloration, hue and pattern: All red
Length: 5 mm
Original ID Thread: https://www.formiculture.com/topic/62-
I've been trying to get a colony of these since I first saw and learned about them four years ago. They are a honeypot ant species that is not seen very often, which of course made finding a queen extremely difficult... but I finally did.
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I knew honeypot ants were flying in the local foothills earlier this year after all the rain we had gotten, so I figured there was a good chance this particular species was flying as well. It was March 16th 2017 when I headed out to a trail right off Ortega Highway in the Santa Ana Mountains where I knew there are an abundance of them. It took so long to get there in traffic that I was left with only 20 minutes of daylight after getting there. Surprisingly, I spotted a founding chamber, and after a few scoops dirt, out popped the queen.
It was one of the strangly-colored queens that always seem to turn out to be M. mimicus, so I initially posted about it on my M. mimicus journal, but now that its workers have eclosed, I can see it is exactly what I had hoped it was--Myrmecocystus wheeleri! If it wasn't for all the M. mimicus queens I found in the past with these exact same colors, I would have immediately assumed it was M. wheeleri. I guess this also means the orange and black colored colony I have been posting on my M. mimicus journal is probably a different species as well.
From original post:
The only other species I think it could be is M. wheeleri, one I have always waned to find. The area I was at is loaded with them, and was actually the main reason I went there. I guess we'll find out once the workers arrive.
She laid two eggs before I even got her in her "dirt box". She had one of them with her here.
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She seems healthy so far, as she had her new chamber dug and closed up the next day.
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