Wow I had no idea Temnothorax was hot here. Do you find the queens in the forest? That is one of my more wanted genus. I have probably never seen Temnothorax in my life nor Formica for that matter which I find weird. Just a lot of Lasius for me.
Yup, I live in the middle of the woods, surrounded by a bunch of conservation land (property is littered with oak trees as well, so guessing this also helps for Temnothorax). Majority of the ants I saw this summer were Temnothorax, Camponotus (several varieties including the Myrmentoma types, but mostly Pennsylvanicus of plague proportions back in May), Lasius late summer (caught about a dozen in one night), and handful of Ponera , Myrmica and Myrmecina started flying same time as the Lasius. I re-aggravated a back injury back in March, and spent a *lot* of time outside walking/hiking all Spring/Summer/Fall to help it, and also went out almost every night after kid's went to bed so spent 100s of hours alate hunting this season. Pheidole and P. Imparis both on my list, but never saw either
The Temnothorax flew at night and were attracted to our driveway lights. If I had a white shirt and held a flash light, I'd be covered in them for about a few days starting on Jun 29th. I saw them for about 2 weeks flying, with highest numbers on warm-humid evenings (looking at log entries it was 66F, 81% humidity for the best night). I have a single Temnothorax queen and worker... Their test tube dried out and they were super-resistant to move to another one adjoining them. By the time I realized they were refusing to move and not finding the other test tube with water, I lost 4 out of the 5 workers. I taped another test tube direct, they still haven't moved, but stopped the die off. I checked on them yesterday in the wine fridge and still alive. They were pretty easy feeders, similar to the Tetramorium in terms of food.
Edited by noebl1, December 20 2016 - 10:49 AM.