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8/19/2017 3 ants Bergen County NJ


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#1 Offline ColKurtz - Posted August 19 2017 - 6:31 PM

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Fantastic day for collection in this area today.  Specimens found in AM and evening.  Found 5 different species.  Need help with 3 as follows.

 

Applies to all 3:

 

1 & 3.  On side walk or adjacent to sidewalk on dirt.  In a schoolyard with grassy areas and nearby wooded areas.  lots of pavement also.   Bergen County NJ (northern NJ)

 

2.  8/19/2017

 

Queen #1

 

4.  8.5mm

5.  shiny black

6-9:  Found on size walk approx 7 pm.  Found only this one.

 

Queen 1
Queen 1
Queen 1
 

Queen #2

 

4. 6.5 mm

5.  Black or really dark brown.  

6-9.  Found only this one.  "stripe-like" appearance on gaster.  time of collection about 6:45pm

 

Queen 2
Queen 2
Queen 2
Queen 2
 

Queen type 3

 

4.  8.5 mm

5.  Brown

6-9.  Found large numbers of these (10), that I didn't collect them all.  Found 2 in mid morning 10:00 am and many more in evening 6:30-7:30 pm.  Several found  digging out chambers, others were searching for a place to dig.  If they had found a good place I left them alone.   Appears to me to look like some sort of Lasius.  

 

Queen type 3
Queen type 3
Queen type 3
Queen type 3

 

 
Thanks in advance, as always, for your help.  My pictures of Queen 1 are not the greatest.  I can always add more if needed.    
 
Also FYI found today were Lasius murphyi and S. molesta
 
Post edited for clarity of the pictures.  

Edited by ColKurtz, August 22 2017 - 4:28 AM.


#2 Offline ColKurtz - Posted August 19 2017 - 9:01 PM

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My guess for queen group 3 is L. Neoniger. I mean it really looks like one to me, but I thought it might be a little bit on the big size.

#3 Offline ColKurtz - Posted August 22 2017 - 4:40 AM

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Anyone have an guesses on Queens  1 or 2?  I am not sure where to start with them.  Queen 1 looks a little like a Tetramorium sp E queen to me but it is way late for that.  I thought perhaps 1 or 2 might be in the Crematogaster genus



#4 Offline Volant - Posted August 22 2017 - 5:12 AM

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My guesses are, Queen 1: Crematogaster cf. cerasi queen. Queen 2: Aphaenogaster cf. picea and I agree with Lasius for queen 3, maybe it's Lasius cf. alienus.
  • VoidElecent and ColKurtz like this

"Oportet nos cognoscere ex nostrorum VI-tripodes amicis."

 

Founding:

Tetramorium cf. caespitum (x1)

 

Lasius cf. Neoniger (x1)

 

Colony:

Tetramorium cf. caespitum (x1)

 
Solenopsis molesta (x3)
 
Aphaenogaster cf. picea (x1)

#5 Offline ColKurtz - Posted August 22 2017 - 6:55 AM

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My guesses are, Queen 1: Crematogaster cf. cerasi queen. Queen 2: Aphaenogaster cf. picea and I agree with Lasius for queen 3, maybe it's Lasius cf. alienus.


Thanks! I originally compared queen 2 to my Aphaenogaster queen, but for some reason I didn't see it. Looking agin now it seems like they are very similar. I feel stupid on that one. The lasius are so hard to tell apart, I guessed neoniger due to the relatively large amount of L murphyi I found in that area over the course of the summer.

#6 Offline Batspiderfish - Posted August 22 2017 - 8:58 AM

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All of these ants are too hard to tell apart from basic photographs, honestly. At least the genera are correct: Crematogaster sp., Aphaenogaster sp., and Lasius sp.


  • WeatherAnt and ColKurtz like this

If you've enjoyed using my expertise and identifications, please do not create undue ecological risk by releasing your ants. The environment which we keep our pet insects is alien and oftentimes unsanitary, so ensure that wild populations stay safe by giving your ants the best care you can manage for the rest of their lives, as we must do with any other pet.

 

Exotic ants are for those who think that vibrant diversity is something you need to pay money to see. It is illegal to transport live ants across state lines.

 

----

Black lives still matter.





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