Harvester queen ants

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yen_saw

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Went out collecting queen ants for Pogonomyrmex barbatus, a species of harvester ant, since we had our first heavy rain in Summer. It was fun with some interesting observation.

Winged queen ants emerging from the nest

wingedqueen.jpg


Mating ball

matingball.jpg


Queen ant digging up the hole

buildnest2.jpg


Queen ant trying to defend itself

queentp3.jpg


Also found a grass mantis

mantis-far.jpg


mantis-close.jpg


Typical ant mount freshly dug up by harvester queen ant

nests.jpg


Collected queens in test tubes

pbarbatus1.jpg


A short movie clip of the ant moving dirt out



 
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I have always wanted to collect some queens but haven't the time or the knowledge to do it yet.

 
I have always wanted to collect some queens but haven't the time or the knowledge to do it yet.
Completely understood! Besides, it is very much depend on luck, and feasible collecting period usually only last for few hours, after that the queen ants have dug deep where retrieving it will be lot more challenging.
Haha Yen you must have some incredible sight to find that grass mantid! Great photos as always
Thanks Chris. Knowing where to find the grass mantis helps but really it was luck and a pair of keen eyes that count the most.
Great phots! Where did you go to get the ants? If I had access to harvester ants I would keep Horny Toad lizards :)
Thanks Leeann. It is really not too far from the Hwy 6 Post Office, at Bear Creek Park next to the golf club. There are plenty of harvester ant nests around the park. But the ever annoyed fire ants are taking over their habitat. I saw many harvester queen ants being killed by fire ants during collecting, not a good sight.For anyone interested to read more. I have included some observations while collecting queen ants for this species.

http://usamantis.com/06-26-2011_Pbarbatus.html

http://usamantis.com/06-27-2011_Pbarbatus.html

 
Very nice finds! :) Good luck in starting some new colonies. :)
Thanks Paul. I left some queens in cooler spot (~26 C) whlie the other queens in my garage which is constantly above 30C. The one with high temp. already have good size larvae in as little as 2 weeks while the eggs from queens in cooler area haven't hatched yet.Queen from cooler room.

pbegg2.jpg


pbegg3.jpg


Queens from warmer garage

pblarvae2.jpg


pblarvae3.jpg


pblarvae4.jpg


I have also noted that queens will regurgitate to feed the larvae, pretty neat.

 
gross lol, looks like fly larva =P Seriously... thats pretty awesome what your doing =) I would love to see how one ant restarts its colony! Like watching a flower grow from a seed.

 
gross lol, looks like fly larva =P Seriously... thats pretty awesome what your doing =) I would love to see how one ant restarts its colony! Like watching a flower grow from a seed.
:D , thanks. It does look like fly larvae! I just want to see how they grow into a colony, and do some studies with variety of conditions to see that affect their colony development, and release it when the colony gets too large for me to handle.
 
The harvester ant queens have worker ants in only about a month time since nuptial flight. Now most colonies have 5-10 worker ants. Very low casualty rate for queens, less than 5%. Now I have close to 10 different ant species, it has been fun to keep both the cannibalistic mantis and highly social ant colony.

HAcolony1.jpg


HAcolony3.jpg


HAcolony2.jpg


 
Very nice! :) My girls are close to having there first workers. I should have probably kept them warmer, but i'm in no rush! ;) Great photos btw! :)

 
That is fascinating! What tpye of setup are you keeping them in? What do they eat?

If you get too many, I know somebody that would take them off of your hands, he has horned lizards :)

 
thankyou :) where do you transfer them after the colony grows bigger? thinking of keeping some myself
I am thinking of building an ant farm when the colony get larger. But they usually do alright in the same container for the 1st year. This is what I took in the University of Houston biology lab. A one year olf colony of Pogonomyrmex barbatus.
1-year.jpg


and this is about 3-yr old

3-year.jpg


pupa.jpg


Very nice! :) My girls are close to having there first workers. I should have probably kept them warmer, but i'm in no rush! ;) Great photos btw! :)
Thanks Paul. It will take longer for the larvae to develop into ant in cooler temp, but that gives you more time to prepare too.
That is fascinating! What tpye of setup are you keeping them in? What do they eat?

If you get too many, I know somebody that would take them off of your hands, he has horned lizards :)
I keep them in the tupperware right now, feeding seeds and honey.
 
is that just a big a$$ ice cube in there lol, That is so interesting on how your taking care of them! I would not dare bring those to my house, its already INFESTED all year round with the small black ones. There like a virus, now a bigger spread? and probably get loose and eat my family =P I would love to sit at someones house and just watch them all day!

 

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