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What Will Strumigenys Eat?


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28 replies to this topic

#1 Offline TennesseeAnts - Posted April 30 2019 - 12:39 PM

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I just got a colony of these elusive little ants, and don't want to fail again. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated!

#2 Offline Ferox_Formicae - Posted April 30 2019 - 5:04 PM

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Springtails. Strumigenys are specially adapted springtail predators. Also, be sure to give them water asap! I made that mistake twice, once with S. membranifera, a colony with three queens, and S. louisianae, one of my favorite SC ants as they're trap-jaw ants, with the exact same jaw structure as Odontomachus or Anochetus or any or the other trap-jaws. They can even catapult backwards with their jaws! Both of these colonies were dead by the morning as they had no water. I miss those ants more than any colonies I've ever had.  :*(


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Camponotus chromaiodes, Camponotus nearcticus, Stigmatomma pallipesStrumigenys brevisetosaStrumigenys clypeataStrumigenys louisianaeStrumigenys membraniferaStrumigenys reflexaStrumigenys rostrata

 

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#3 Offline TennesseeAnts - Posted April 30 2019 - 5:37 PM

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Thanks!

#4 Offline Ferox_Formicae - Posted April 30 2019 - 5:45 PM

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Thanks!

No problem! Any idea on what species you have?


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Camponotus chromaiodes, Camponotus nearcticus, Stigmatomma pallipesStrumigenys brevisetosaStrumigenys clypeataStrumigenys louisianaeStrumigenys membraniferaStrumigenys reflexaStrumigenys rostrata

 

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#5 Offline TennesseeAnts - Posted April 30 2019 - 7:11 PM

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Not a clue! I will try to ID them tomorrow. If I can raise these properly, I will probably have more than one species.

Also, do these mate in the nest?

#6 Offline Ferox_Formicae - Posted April 30 2019 - 8:59 PM

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Not a clue! I will try to ID them tomorrow. If I can raise these properly, I will probably have more than one species.

Also, do these mate in the nest?

No, they have nuptial flights. I'm so jealous that you found these though. I absolutely adore Strumigenys, but I haven't found any yet this year. Where'd you find these?


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Camponotus chromaiodes, Camponotus nearcticus, Stigmatomma pallipesStrumigenys brevisetosaStrumigenys clypeataStrumigenys louisianaeStrumigenys membraniferaStrumigenys reflexaStrumigenys rostrata

 

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#7 Offline TennesseeAnts - Posted May 1 2019 - 2:17 AM

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You under leaf litter in a hollow twig.


Edit: When you try to type fast.

What the sentence is supposed to say: You find them under leaf litter in a hollow twig. :lol:

Edited by Ant_Dude2908, May 1 2019 - 3:23 AM.


#8 Offline TennesseeAnts - Posted May 1 2019 - 3:22 AM

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They like honey water.

#9 Offline Ferox_Formicae - Posted May 1 2019 - 4:57 AM

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You under leaf litter in a hollow twig.


Edit: When you try to type fast.

What the sentence is supposed to say: You find them under leaf litter in a hollow twig. :lol:

Okay, I'll be on the lookout. I usually find them under rocks.

 

They like honey water.

Hmm, that's interesting.


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Camponotus chromaiodes, Camponotus nearcticus, Stigmatomma pallipesStrumigenys brevisetosaStrumigenys clypeataStrumigenys louisianaeStrumigenys membraniferaStrumigenys reflexaStrumigenys rostrata

 

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#10 Offline TennesseeAnts - Posted May 1 2019 - 5:16 AM

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Should I make a journal for them?

#11 Offline Ferox_Formicae - Posted May 1 2019 - 6:16 AM

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Should I make a journal for them?

Heck yeah! If you have pictures, I could maybe try and identify them. I'm going to a park today with my girlfriend, so I'm gonna be on the lookout for some Strumigenys. I know there are also huge carpenter ants there cause I saw them when I was younger, so I'm gonna try and identify them. I'm guessing they're C. castaneus and C. pennsylvanicus.


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Camponotus chromaiodes, Camponotus nearcticus, Stigmatomma pallipesStrumigenys brevisetosaStrumigenys clypeataStrumigenys louisianaeStrumigenys membraniferaStrumigenys reflexaStrumigenys rostrata

 

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#12 Offline TennesseeAnts - Posted May 1 2019 - 6:24 AM

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You say you are going to the park, but she doesn't know why you're really going! :lol:

Good luck.
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#13 Offline Ferox_Formicae - Posted May 1 2019 - 6:30 AM

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You say you are going to the park, but she doesn't know why you're really going! :lol:

Good luck.

Well it is a park, a nature park.


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Camponotus chromaiodes, Camponotus nearcticus, Stigmatomma pallipesStrumigenys brevisetosaStrumigenys clypeataStrumigenys louisianaeStrumigenys membraniferaStrumigenys reflexaStrumigenys rostrata

 

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#14 Offline TennesseeAnts - Posted May 1 2019 - 7:09 AM

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Oooo. Can I come??? :lol:
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#15 Offline Carpenter - Posted May 1 2019 - 1:43 PM

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If you are having trouble getting springtails in time, try flightless fruit flies until you get a spring tail culture going


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#16 Offline ponerinecat - Posted May 1 2019 - 2:48 PM

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They like honey water.

Never heard of that before.


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#17 Offline Ferox_Formicae - Posted May 1 2019 - 2:59 PM

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Oooo. Can I come??? :lol:

Well, I'm already back, and I saw four species of CamponotusC. pennsylvanicusC. snellingiC. nearcticus, and C. chromaiodes. No Strumigenys though.  :|


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Camponotus chromaiodes, Camponotus nearcticus, Stigmatomma pallipesStrumigenys brevisetosaStrumigenys clypeataStrumigenys louisianaeStrumigenys membraniferaStrumigenys reflexaStrumigenys rostrata

 

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#18 Offline Lisberg - Posted May 1 2019 - 2:59 PM

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Biology

Colonies are small (40 to 200 workers), may contain several dealate queens and are seldom seen. In Australia, nests occur in rotten wood, in small rotting seeds or twigs, or directly in the superficial soil layers (Brown 1958a). Foraging is probably hypogaeic (beneath cover), given its frequent occurrence in leaf litter samples, and that its diet is comprised mainly of collembolans. Also occasionally caught in pitfalls. Spring-trap mandibles and an immobilizing sting ensure the successful hunting of small creatures in or beneath the leaf litter. A slow gait and employment of a death-feigning reaction promote the difficulty in detection. Queens forage like workers.

 

 

 

https://www.landcare...igenys-perplexa

 

Sorry, all the replies only loaded after i send my post :sore:


Edited by Lisberg, May 1 2019 - 3:00 PM.

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#19 Offline Acutus - Posted May 1 2019 - 5:48 PM

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Good luck! So now you all have me curious about these cryptic species! What size exactly are these guys? Are we talking like 1 mm? 


Billy

 

Currently keeping:

Camponotus chromaiodes

Camponotus castaneus

Formica subsericea


#20 Offline Acutus - Posted May 1 2019 - 5:56 PM

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You under leaf litter in a hollow twig.


Edit: When you try to type fast.

What the sentence is supposed to say: You find them under leaf litter in a hollow twig. :lol:

 

So the colony is in a hollow twig?


Billy

 

Currently keeping:

Camponotus chromaiodes

Camponotus castaneus

Formica subsericea





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