Jump to content

  • Chat
  •  
  •  

Welcome to Formiculture.com!

This is a website for anyone interested in Myrmecology and all aspects of finding, keeping, and studying ants. The site and forum are free to use. Register now to gain access to all of our features. Once registered and logged in, you will be able to create topics, post replies to existing threads, give reputation points to your fellow members, get your own private messenger, post status updates, manage your profile and so much more. If you already have an account, login here - otherwise create an account for free today!

Photo

Why don't me ants help?!


  • Please log in to reply
6 replies to this topic

#1 Offline Temperateants - Posted June 12 2020 - 2:11 PM

Temperateants

    Advanced Member

  • Members
  • PipPipPip
  • 436 posts

In multiple Camponotus colonies I've lost workers because one got itself stuck on cotton, which is understandable, but why don't the other workers help? Like they are so good at destroying cotton why not just pull the worker to safety?


Check out my Youtube Channel! https://www.youtube....xh-HaScAuE5CShQ

Check out my Crematogaster Journal! https://www.formicul...e-2#entry141180

 

 


#2 Offline AntsMaryland - Posted June 12 2020 - 2:15 PM

AntsMaryland

    Advanced Member

  • Members
  • PipPipPip
  • 543 posts
  • LocationMaryland

Worker ants do what worker ants do… But if you want to prevent this in the future – look no further… well you're gonna have to look a little further by reading a short thread.

 

https://www.formicul...on-ball-covers/

 

That should solve your problems.

 

Hope this helps!


Aphaenogaster cf. rudis 

Tetramorium immigrans 

Tapinoma sessile

Formica subsericea

Pheidole sp.

Camponotus nearcticus


#3 Offline ANTdrew - Posted June 12 2020 - 4:03 PM

ANTdrew

    Advanced Member

  • Moderators
  • PipPipPip
  • 9,402 posts
  • LocationAlexandria, VA
The more I read this forum, the more I think Camponotus ain’t nothin’ but trouble.
  • Antennal_Scrobe and Temperateants like this
"The ants are a people not strong, yet they prepare their meat in the summer." Prov. 30:25
Keep ordinary ants in extraordinary ways.

#4 Offline Temperateants - Posted June 12 2020 - 4:50 PM

Temperateants

    Advanced Member

  • Members
  • PipPipPip
  • 436 posts

The more I read this forum, the more I think Camponotus ain’t nothin’ but trouble.

They really are one of the least intelligent ants in my opinion.


Check out my Youtube Channel! https://www.youtube....xh-HaScAuE5CShQ

Check out my Crematogaster Journal! https://www.formicul...e-2#entry141180

 

 


#5 Offline Antennal_Scrobe - Posted June 12 2020 - 8:06 PM

Antennal_Scrobe

    Advanced Member

  • Members
  • PipPipPip
  • 933 posts
  • LocationMilwaukee, Wisconsin

I remember when a worker eclosed in my Pogonomyrmex colony, and it had bits of its pupa stuck to its legs, gluing them together. The other ants could easily have helped it, but the ant ultimately was not free until the next day.


  • Temperateants likes this

Currently keeping:

 

Tetramorium immigrans, Pogonomyrmex occidentalis

Myrmica punctiventris, Formica subsericea

Formica pallidefulva, Aphaeogaster cf. rudis

Camponotus pennsylvanicus

Camponotus nearcticus

Crematogaster cerasi

Temnothorax ambiguus

Prenolepis imparis


#6 Offline OhNoNotAgain - Posted June 13 2020 - 9:38 PM

OhNoNotAgain

    Advanced Member

  • Members
  • PipPipPip
  • 1,068 posts
  • LocationCalifornia Argentine Ant Territory

Hmm, maybe the helping your sisters thing (like per the article on Veromessor pergandei rescuing from spiderwebs) really is more rare than I thought?

I had several incidents of Vero pergandei workers coated in sugar. The colony that was slowly dying ("Derpymessor") totally ignored the coated ant, even when I put her in the test tube. My successful colony - well, outworld foragers kind of ignored the ant, but once I put her in the test tube, a nanny ant came over and dragged her further in and other nannies cleaned her off.

 

Of course, I read the articles like stories of ants doing medical triage to bring home the wounded (posted the article somewhere on Formi) so seeing derpiness can be a little disappointing. But like with my Veros, or with my fraggles where the foragers couldn't figure out fruit flies were edible until a nanny did, maybe IQ varies by ant and only increases after the colony as a whole gains enough members that some of them figure things out.


Formiculture Journals::

Veromessor pergandei, andrei; Novomessor cockerelli

Camponotus fragilis; also separate journal: Camponotus sansabeanus, vicinus, quercicola

Liometopum occidentale;  Prenolepis imparis; Myrmecocystus mexicanus

Pogonomyrmex subnitidus and previously californicus

Tetramorium sp.

Termites: Zootermopsis angusticollis

 

Isopods: A. gestroi, granulatum, kluugi, maculatum, vulgare; C. murina; P. hoffmannseggi, P. haasi, P. ornatus; V. parvus

Spoods: Phidippus sp.


#7 Offline Temperateants - Posted June 14 2020 - 6:44 AM

Temperateants

    Advanced Member

  • Members
  • PipPipPip
  • 436 posts

Hmm, maybe the helping your sisters thing (like per the article on Veromessor pergandei rescuing from spiderwebs) really is more rare than I thought?

I had several incidents of Vero pergandei workers coated in sugar. The colony that was slowly dying ("Derpymessor") totally ignored the coated ant, even when I put her in the test tube. My successful colony - well, outworld foragers kind of ignored the ant, but once I put her in the test tube, a nanny ant came over and dragged her further in and other nannies cleaned her off.

 

Of course, I read the articles like stories of ants doing medical triage to bring home the wounded (posted the article somewhere on Formi) so seeing derpiness can be a little disappointing. But like with my Veros, or with my fraggles where the foragers couldn't figure out fruit flies were edible until a nanny did, maybe IQ varies by ant and only increases after the colony as a whole gains enough members that some of them figure things out.

Lol some people have compared ants to "many dumb things that become one smart thing" so a large colony that cleans up after itself, recognizes food, and actually has teamwork is a high IQ with many brain cells, while a founding colony of Campontous that puts trash on the colonies own water source and doesn't help other workers is a tiny brain with low IQ.


Check out my Youtube Channel! https://www.youtube....xh-HaScAuE5CShQ

Check out my Crematogaster Journal! https://www.formicul...e-2#entry141180

 

 





0 user(s) are reading this topic

0 members, 0 guests, 0 anonymous users