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345 replies to this topic
#21 Offline - Posted May 14 2015 - 11:37 PM
This thing grew quite a bit of green mold between the wood and the sides of the container before I ever put anything in it. This makes me wonder why sometimes I have rotted logs that never seem to grow mold no matter what, and other times I've finished sterilizing them and had them covered in mold the next day. Also, most of them in the wild don't have any mold on them at all. I have ideas as to why, but I decided to just try a little experiment to see how different conditions affect mold growth on rotted wood and to what degree. Even though some things seem obvious, some times I'm surprised.
I cut a rotted log into pieces and put them all in different combinations of conditions--aerobic, anaerobic (for the most part), cold, hot, sterilized, not sterilized, with springtails, and without springtails.
I cut a rotted log into pieces and put them all in different combinations of conditions--aerobic, anaerobic (for the most part), cold, hot, sterilized, not sterilized, with springtails, and without springtails.
- Jonathan21700 likes this
#22 Offline - Posted May 15 2015 - 5:28 AM
It might be all the micro-organisms that are normally present in the wild.
#23 Offline - Posted May 15 2015 - 6:37 AM
That's what a few people have suggested, and is part of the reason I'm trying this. Unfortunately this log was really dry, so I'm wondering if a lot of those microorganisms might have already been dead.
- MrPurpleB likes this
#24 Offline - Posted May 21 2015 - 10:04 AM
Are you going to keep all of them in these setups? Nice! I like natural nests.
No. Only four right now.
Very nice looking formicariums. All of your work always comes out so clean and even looking.
Have you experimented with substrate at all? You might be able to get a cleaner look into the nests if you use a coarser sand mixed with a very small amount of peat or potting soil.
Thanks. "clean and even looking" is exactly what I want. I'm not quite sure what you mean by cleaner in regards to the substrate. I actually purposely mix sand and clay to make substrate closer to what they nest in, while also something that drys hard.
It's the clay dirt, right? It's such a fine grain that it's mucking up the view. Is there a larger grain material you could use?
PTAntFan----------------------------------Pogonomyrmex Californicus*****************************<p>I use the $3 Tower I made up. See it here.
#25 Offline - Posted May 21 2015 - 10:15 AM
I can use sieves and get rid of any sized particles I want, but the problem is this:
Smaller particle size: more bonding strength, poor visibility
Larger particle size: less bonding strength, better visibility.
#26 Offline - Posted May 21 2015 - 1:56 PM
Yeah, that's the rub isn't it.
PTAntFan----------------------------------Pogonomyrmex Californicus*****************************<p>I use the $3 Tower I made up. See it here.
#27 Offline - Posted May 22 2015 - 4:45 PM
Where do you find these acrylic/plastic containers from, dspdrew? I've been looking for them in local stores but with little success.
#28 Offline - Posted May 22 2015 - 7:00 PM
Where do you find these acrylic/plastic containers from, dspdrew? I've been looking for them in local stores but with little success.
http://www.container...0032168&N=80804
#29 Offline - Posted May 22 2015 - 7:46 PM
Where do you find these acrylic/plastic containers from, dspdrew? I've been looking for them in local stores but with little success.
http://www.container...0032168&N=80804
Thanks for the link! Do the individual boxes come with the lid or would you have to buy 2 of them and use one as the lid?
#30 Offline - Posted May 22 2015 - 7:53 PM
Yes they have a lid. The lids are basically the same as the boxes, only much shorter.
#31 Offline - Posted May 22 2015 - 7:56 PM
Oh, you know what? I'm sorry, I gave you a link to the wrong containers. I didn't realize which thread this was, and the other containers are asked about allllllllll the time. The ones used in this thread were actually linked in the thread already.
#32 Offline - Posted May 22 2015 - 8:25 PM
Oh, you know what? I'm sorry, I gave you a link to the wrong containers. I didn't realize which thread this was, and the other containers are asked about allllllllll the time. The ones used in this thread were actually linked in the thread already.
Oh, that's fine. More information about the containers! Can I also get a link to the steel mesh you used if ya don't mind?
#33 Offline - Posted May 22 2015 - 8:31 PM
I don't have a link for that. I found it on Ebay I think. I will tell you it's100 mesh though.
#34 Offline - Posted June 6 2015 - 3:12 PM
That last experiment was useless. I couldn't any of them to grow mold haha.
- Leo likes this
#35 Offline - Posted July 16 2015 - 10:44 PM
Aside from 3D printing the inner tank now, I decided to put a hole and plug on the surface as well as the bottom.
This can help if you need to move a queen in that already has brood. You can tape a very small test tube onto it i hopes that she keeps her brood inside it until she has her nest dug. This would keep her from burying her brood. I'm trying this now with one of my Myrmecocystus mexicanus queens, but so far she has just decided to make the tube her nest. I would imagine it won't be humid enough, and she would eventually move, but knowing Honeypot ants, I wouldn't be surprised if she just sits there until the eggs all dry out.
This can help if you need to move a queen in that already has brood. You can tape a very small test tube onto it i hopes that she keeps her brood inside it until she has her nest dug. This would keep her from burying her brood. I'm trying this now with one of my Myrmecocystus mexicanus queens, but so far she has just decided to make the tube her nest. I would imagine it won't be humid enough, and she would eventually move, but knowing Honeypot ants, I wouldn't be surprised if she just sits there until the eggs all dry out.
#36 Offline - Posted July 17 2015 - 12:04 AM
What about the dirt? She needs somewhere to put the dirt she dug and might not have enough room in the tube for it.
#37 Offline - Posted July 17 2015 - 5:25 AM
She doesn't put the dirt in the tube.
#38 Offline - Posted July 17 2015 - 5:29 AM
I sure like those silicone plugs that you use. It's a shame they're so expensive!
PhD Student & NSF Graduate Research Fellow | University of Florida Dept. of Entomology & Nematology - Lucky Ant Lab
Founder & Director of The Ant Network. Ant keeper since 2009. Insect ecologist and science communicator. He/Him.
#39 Offline - Posted July 17 2015 - 6:34 AM
I sure like those silicone plugs that you use. It's a shame they're so expensive!
Oh no, it was the original black rubber plug that cost so much. These silicone ones I am making myself for next to nothing--only my time. If anybody wants some, I'm sure I could sell them some.
#40 Offline - Posted July 17 2015 - 6:51 AM
What's needed is a semi-flexible coupling that fits a standard size test tube. Can you make those? 😁
- Ravynsong likes this
PTAntFan----------------------------------Pogonomyrmex Californicus*****************************<p>I use the $3 Tower I made up. See it here.
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