![](http://i.imgur.com/Nv0GK4H.jpg)
![](http://i.imgur.com/8cqK4RI.jpg)
Thanks in advance.
I do not think that is even a Tetramorium.
This is what a Tetramorium Drone looks like:
Captured 6/17/17 in Colorado simply to help show what the differences are between Tet queens and drones. He has since died 2 days after capture so I should take some closer, better detailed photos.
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Tetramoriums are the only thing I know. I shouldn't even be IDing but I'm so very confident on that one that I wanted to attempt to be helpful. I carry my tubes and see something with wings and I'll capture it and question what it is later. I've ended up with a sweat bee and a termite alate once. Heck, I captured ...6 pogonomyrmex rugosus drones last year because I didn't know the difference.
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Keep it up and hang in there! Wolf, another Colorado Anter, has some Camponotus and I think he's the only one in Colorado right now that does...
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"Oportet nos cognoscere ex nostrorum VI-tripodes amicis."
Founding:
Tetramorium cf. caespitum (x1)
Lasius cf. Neoniger (x1)
Colony:
Tetramorium cf. caespitum (x1)
Would be worth saving this as a specimen for future study.
Falling asleep and still figured out how to actually embed his pictures. I'm impressed.
Falling asleep and still figured out how to actually embed his pictures. I'm impressed.
Or..... you continue to post them however you see fit because its entirely opinionated.
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