Ant ID thread: http://www.formicult...nogaster-picea/
This is a young colony of a queen, 3 nanitics and some brood (few pupae and larvae).
The Aphaenoogaster does not have ants' social stomach. What that means is that they cannot pass food through regurgitation.
So far this colony has been very challenging.
First of all, they absolutely cannot seem to tolerate light. I have Lasius, Formica, and Myrmica all of which can tolerate light. Lasius colony I have for an example is even able to tolerate very bright LED lights by my microscope.
They may not be used to light but their reaction to light has been overly strong, so strong that they moved out of queen's chamber of growth chamber...
It began like this.
I relocated them into a growth chamber last night and placed two liquid feeders and went to bed.
In the morning, I took the dish out and placed in my bathroom for observation. I placed a small chunk of blue 100 and realized that nothing was in the queen's chamber.
Baffled, I continued to look for them. And where I found them was ...
I was kind of shocked to find that they couldn't tolerate light for few minutes and relocated to the only shade they could find in a heart beat.
Their behaviors
I conducted a small test. Because they do not have social stomach, they cannot share food between each other. What they eat or drink stay on them. Therefore, workers use tools to transport liquid. What I've found out from googling was that they use dirt to soak sugary liquid and transport dirt to nest mates.
What that means is that they cannot live in a nest that has no substrate. They must have substrate or small seeds. <- I guess that's how they've become known as harvesters.
I placed the white substrate under a liquid feeder to see whether they really move substrate or not. I left that setup for a night and I found few white particles in queen's chamber. So, they use substrate to transport sugary liquid for others to drink.
This behavior was also filmed by my camera last night.
Edited by dean_k, April 22 2015 - 6:59 PM.