Found a couple small camponotus colonies.
September- Collected many Lasius queens, a few Solenopsis molesta, and a couple Brachymermex queens.
Edited by Ants4fun, February 6 2020 - 9:56 AM.
Edited by Ants4fun, February 6 2020 - 9:56 AM.
Edited by Ants4fun, January 30 2019 - 11:57 AM.
Lasius alienus - This colony is doing well. Their larvae are growing like crazy and the largest are just starting to pupate. The queen just laid a brand new batch of eggs as well. Although they are a little ways away from needing a formicarium; when they do I'll most likely move them into a homemade firebrick nest.
Lasius flavus? I'm excited about these guys. Found them last August. Over a dozen of these queens. These seemed to do well together. Now, they have a whole bunch of eggs. Hopefully, they will grow exponentially. This might easily become my largest colony since I had to rehouse all my adult colonies when I moved.
Other Lasius neoniger? queens: I have a couple single queens and a double queen test tube. Double queen has a lot of brood.
Camponotus pennsylvanicus - Unfortunately one queen, and a worker from her colony died. So, I gave the remaining worker and larvae to the other colony. This colony now has three workers. The queen just laid six eggs. I think I startled them into eating their smaller larvae one time, so I'll try to be more careful with these guys. Hopefully, I can get some more of these guys. We have plenty of firewood waiting to get burnt to a crisp that I know has some carpenter ant colonies as well as some Aephenogaster colonies I will collect come spring time.
Solenopsis molesta - This 4 queen colony has quite a bit of brood. Never had a colony of these guys so, hopefully, they will do good.
Brachymyrmex - found this queen last fall. She has a couple eggs. She is super tiny, so we'll see how well she does.
Edited by Ants4fun, February 9 2019 - 2:28 PM.
Edited by Ants4fun, February 20 2019 - 9:13 AM.
First - got a new ant cabinet.
Also, I have a shipment from THA coming in, with a bunch of formicariums I don't need yet, but will when summer time hits.
Lasius alienus - If you haven't checked out my formicarium build thread - I moved this colony into a homemade formicarium.
Their test tube was getting pretty moldy, so I just dumped them right in. This colony lost a couple older workers, and are hovering around 15 or so. They should double or triple their size in a couple weeks time, however. They have plenty of eggs, larvae, and pupae.
This funny little worker has a brood pile of his own just outside the nest. The other ants seem to let her be, but she has her own little thing going on.
These guys can't get enough of Byformica Ant Nectar. I highly recommend it, as well as their galileo feeders. They seem to work really well.
Lasius cf. neoniger queens - The two queen setup and single queen are doing well. They should have workers in a week or two. I believe they are neoniger, but the single queen could be alienus or americanus.
Camponotus pennsylvanicus - These guys ended up moving into a test tube.
They ate their larvae a week or two ago, but laid nearly two dozen eggs, which are just now turning into larvae.
Hopefully this colony can grow quickly. I try not to observe them as much, as they get easily disturbed, but they seem pretty fat and happy, especially the queen. They also love Byformica Ant Nectar.
Brachymyrmex cf. depilis
Surprised how well this queen is doing. Didn't have high hopes, but she now has developing larvae. She is swollen from sugar water I gave her when I first took her out of hibernation. This is my first queen of this genus I have ever kept.
Zoomed out to show just how tiny she is.
Solenopsis molesta - Eggs finally hatched, and grew pretty quickly. I expect to see some pupae any day now. These pictures show just how different each queen looks from each other.
Edited by Ants4fun, May 22 2019 - 8:53 AM.
Any tips for finding L. neoniger queens? This species intrigues me, but all I ever find are parasitic ones
Any tips for finding L. neoniger queens? This species intrigues me, but all I ever find are parasitic ones
Any tips for finding L. neoniger queens? This species intrigues me, but all I ever find are parasitic ones
Lasius neoniger account from probably 30-40% of the ant colonies where I live, so you can collect hundreds.
Yeah, their nuptial flights are a little hard to miss around here. You basically have thousands of queens and males flying above your head. Sometimes I just like to take an old butterfly net and catch some right out of the air (and some are still mating, which is a great way of telling if your queen is mated or not ) My friend also finds them congregating on decor grass.
"God made..... all the creatures that move along the ground according to their kinds (including ants). And God saw that it was good. Genesis 1:25 NIV version
Keeping:
Formica cf. pallidefulva, cf. incerta, cf. argentea
Formica cf. aserva, cf. subintegra
Myrmica sp.
Lasius neoniger, brevicornis
And also, Solenopsis molesta fly on the exact same time every year. Here they are equally as abundant as Lasius neoniger.
"God made..... all the creatures that move along the ground according to their kinds (including ants). And God saw that it was good. Genesis 1:25 NIV version
Keeping:
Formica cf. pallidefulva, cf. incerta, cf. argentea
Formica cf. aserva, cf. subintegra
Myrmica sp.
Lasius neoniger, brevicornis
Lasius colony took a hit. Unfortunately that formicarium can't go very long without water. So, I moved them back into a test tube setup and boosted them with a couple hundred pupae from a wild colony to get their population back up.
Largest Camponotus colony dealt with the same thing.
To solve their problem, I put the formicarium in a large outworld, poured hydrostone, and set it up like an all in one.
Now It can retain more water, and I can put a test tube of water in the outworld.
Also brood boosted them with maybe a hundred wild pupae, so their population should skyrocket.
Around the end of may I caught 8 or so Camponotus pennsylvanicus queens. They all have workers now, about 10 each. Moved most of them into formicariums.
I will say that the genesis test tube system works wonders for Camponotus. They loved that so much better than a normal test tube.
Edited by Ants4fun, July 31 2019 - 12:04 PM.
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