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Dead Queen


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9 replies to this topic

#1 Offline Mortamir - Posted May 16 2018 - 7:49 PM

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Today I was looking at all my queens I caught so far this year. 51

I noticed one of them looked dead. I grabbed my magnifying glass and sure enough she was dead. I took a good look at her and it appears her abdomen was completely empty. Then I noticed some movement in the test tube and I saw some small larva moving around. At first i thought they might be hers, but they were moving fast. So I took a couple of pictures of them hoping someone could possibly ID them. There were about 35 to 40 in the test tube. Some had pushed through the cotton and drowned in the water.






I know the pictures suck but keep in mind the are about 1.5 mm long.

If you know what these are please say.

Peace.

#2 Offline Jadeninja9 - Posted May 16 2018 - 7:55 PM

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Yep those would be her larvae. If you have another queen of the same species look up how to brood boost and do that.

#3 Offline Mortamir - Posted May 16 2018 - 7:58 PM

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Hmm I was thinking it was some sort of parasitic critter.

#4 Offline LC3 - Posted May 16 2018 - 11:15 PM

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Are Camponotus larvae that mobile? Enough to push through cotton and move noticably fast along the surface of a glass tube?

I’m not so sure about that.

On the other hand I have no clue what these could be.

Edited by LC3, May 16 2018 - 11:16 PM.


#5 Offline Jadeninja9 - Posted May 16 2018 - 11:48 PM

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I didn’t read the part where it said they pushed passed the cotton. Maybe they’re not actually her larvae.

Edited by Jadeninja9, May 16 2018 - 11:48 PM.


#6 Offline gcsnelling - Posted May 17 2018 - 2:18 AM

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Look like a fly larva.


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#7 Offline Phoenix - Posted May 17 2018 - 6:57 AM

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Maggots possibly?


Colonies

Camponotus cf. albosparsus — Journal

Camponotus cf. auriventris — Journal
Camponotus sp.
Colobopsis spp.
Crematogaster sp.
Nylanderia sp.  Journal
Pheidole cf. parva
Solenopsis geminata — Journal
 

#8 Offline YsTheAnt - Posted May 19 2018 - 4:18 PM

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Those look like phorid fly maggots, a founding queen won't have 40 first larvae if they're Camponotus anyways.

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#9 Offline StayLoki - Posted May 19 2018 - 5:52 PM

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They're maggots.
I work in veterinary medicine and sometimes I see them in the summer in dog ***t in fecal samples.
The ones I see have full digestive tracks as they've been feeding all day, and these are starving, making them appear as a larvae or pupae. But definitely a fly maggot.

#10 Offline StayLoki - Posted May 19 2018 - 5:55 PM

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They can eat through flesh and rot an animal away. They can deff chew into some cotton.




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