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Franklin, PA, July 22nd 2018


Best Answer AntsAreUs , July 22 2018 - 6:17 PM

Lasius murphyi

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#1 Offline Yomegami - Posted July 22 2018 - 5:55 PM

Yomegami

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This potential queen was captured at around 7 PM on the titular date walking across my front sidewalk. I live pretty much in the middle of nowhere; the titular town/city is the closest civilized area, about ten miles away. The local environment is heavily forested. It had just finished raining when I found her. 

 

Picture

 

As all I have is a crappy cellphone camera, here's the details that might not be clear from the picture:

  • She's around 6/16ths of an inch (~9 mm) in length.
  • She's reddish in overall coloration, with no major variation. 
  • Her petiole is rather thick, and appears to have one segment. 
  • She seems unable to climb the sides of the glass test tube I'm keeping her in. 
  • She also seems very determined to try to escape the test tube. This makes me think she might be a worker rather than a queen; the last time I caught an ant this eager to escape, it turned out to be a worker. 

Assuming she is a queen, my current guess is that she's a parasitic Lasius queen. I'd like to make sure, however. 



#2 Offline AntsAreUs - Posted July 22 2018 - 6:17 PM   Best Answer

AntsAreUs

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Lasius murphyi


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#3 Offline Yomegami - Posted July 23 2018 - 6:05 AM

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As I thought, she was a social parasite. Thank you very much!

 

Considering that's apparently a Vulnerable species, I'd be tempted to try and raise her regardless, but alas I don't have a colony of her host species (Lasius neoniger), and I'm more or less a newbie ant keeper anyway so I doubt I'd have much luck even if I did. So I opted to release her; she'll know what to do better than I would.



#4 Offline AntsAreUs - Posted July 23 2018 - 8:52 AM

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As I thought, she was a social parasite. Thank you very much!

 

Considering that's apparently a Vulnerable species, I'd be tempted to try and raise her regardless, but alas I don't have a colony of her host species (Lasius neoniger), and I'm more or less a newbie ant keeper anyway so I doubt I'd have much luck even if I did. So I opted to release her; she'll know what to do better than I would.

I'm having some luck with mine with only 3/5 queens dying with their hosts. The other 3 I have observed the workers feeding the queens which in turn should let them lay eggs.






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