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Myrmecia chrysogaster


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56 replies to this topic

#21 Offline Canadian anter - Posted January 22 2017 - 8:08 AM

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Alabama anter, termites are really hard to raise from scratch. Also, Crazylegs you're right it is chrysogaster. piliventris don't have the red


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#22 Offline Alabama Anter - Posted January 22 2017 - 12:14 PM

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Alabama anter, termites are really hard to raise from scratch. Also, Crazylegs you're right it is chrysogaster. piliventris don't have the red

Mmhmm I know but worth a try right?

YJK


#23 Offline Leo - Posted January 22 2017 - 4:16 PM

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QUEEN VS QUEEN



#24 Offline CrazyLegs - Posted January 22 2017 - 4:48 PM

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I can turn over just about any stick in the yard to collect some termites.

Or just leave the outside light on in the eve to collect something different, like a lacewing or a wood roach.

Nature is my ant fridge. :)


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#25 Offline CrazyLegs - Posted January 25 2017 - 6:56 PM

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After realizing that food is presented to her on a regular basis, she has really settled in and got to work laying some more eggs. :)

4 eggs!
4 eggs

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#26 Offline Connectimyrmex - Posted January 25 2017 - 10:17 PM

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Thanks Alabama Anter. She's gonna be tough to raise, she gets so easily disturbed.

She attempts to sting anything that comes into the tube, even a pin with a drop of maple syrup was attacked before being hurriedly consumed.

I open the cork just a crack and she drop kicks her egg and comes running. :D

I thought it may have been a fulvipes at first but they have long slender black mandibles with the teeth concentrated at the tip.

This girl has brown mandibles with the teeth more spread along the shaft.

I think piliventris have black legs and the same longer black mandibles.

I may be wrong but I did look at those two species before concluding she was a chrysogaster.

Why are there so many similar. %)

*kicks egg*

Queen: daughter, stay back. I've felt a tiny but dangerous gust of air.

 

 

 

Seriously, though. I'm so jelly. Myrmecia has always been high on my want list. Also, maybe you should try getting a founding formicarium (like THA Atom or Hearth) to make feeding easier.

 

My semi-claustral tetramorium is the complete opposite of your myrmecia. When I pull out the cotton, she freaks and dives into the nearest crevice. Then she realizes that she left her eggs and goes back for them. But when she gets to her eggs, she forgets why she ran and just sits back on top of her clutch.


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Hawaiiant (Ben)

Keeper of
Miniature Labradoodle
Baby Wolf Spider
Mud Dauber wasp larvae
Ochetellus Glaber
Solenopsis Geminata
Brachymyrmex Obscurior
Cardiocondyla Emeryi
Tetramorium Bicarinatum
Plagiolepis Alluaudi
Anoplolepis Gracilipes
Technomyrmex Difficilis
Pheidole Megacephala
Aholehole fish
Cowrie snail
Sea Fan Worm
100+ sea squirts
Tree seedlings
Ghost Crab
Day Gecko
Small Fat Centipede
Endemic Lacewing larva
Vernal Pool shrimps

#27 Offline CrazyLegs - Posted January 25 2017 - 11:53 PM

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I have a plan for when her first nanitics arrive. ;)

I sure hope she makes it.


Edited by CrazyLegs, January 25 2017 - 11:54 PM.


#28 Offline Leo - Posted January 26 2017 - 12:32 AM

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I'm goin to go to Australia in the summer holidays

#29 Offline CrazyLegs - Posted January 26 2017 - 2:59 AM

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Better be quick, it's the middle of summer now. And it's been a scorcher. :)



#30 Offline CrazyLegs - Posted January 26 2017 - 12:54 PM

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Put a lacewing in there for her last night.

Despite it being already dead, she freaked out over it. I figured she would settle down and eat it later on.

Woke up this morning and she has eaten three of her four eggs. :facepalm:

The lacewing has been pushed up under the cork and looks uneaten.

Might have to leave this girl be for a bit to settle some more.



#31 Offline Californian Anter - Posted January 26 2017 - 5:45 PM

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You should set the test tube up in an outworld and leave the entrance open. Put like sand in it and partially bury the tube. Then, open up the test tube and put her food in there; that way feeding is more natural.


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Keeper of:

 

Camponotus Vicinus

Prenolepis Imparis

Tetramorium Sp. E x2


#32 Offline CrazyLegs - Posted January 26 2017 - 10:32 PM

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I'm currently building a formicarium for this ant with a built in founding area.

Just don't want to rush it. ;)


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#33 Offline CrazyLegs - Posted January 28 2017 - 2:32 PM

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I've named this girl "Ereshkigal" ( Ruler of the Underworld )

Under advice from some of you guys I've modified her tube to go into a small outworld.

Chrysogaster starter kit
She immediately began taking small rocks from the outworld into her tube.
I think the container had chocolates in it or something, I can't remember but I probably ate them in one mouthful if it did. :D
I've narrowed down her favorite food to small spiders which I can now simply pop into the outworld for her to find naturally.
I'm trying to keep photos to a minimum for the moment, but I can tell you she is back up to three eggs.
New digs
I pushed a small piece of clay up under the tube to make a little ramp.

 


Edited by CrazyLegs, January 28 2017 - 2:33 PM.

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#34 Offline Connectimyrmex - Posted January 28 2017 - 2:42 PM

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I'm sure that this queen will get a worker.

I've noticed that with my semi-claustral queens infertile ones don't make a good egg clutch and they just scatter them. Also, you need LOTS of protein (I feed my tetramorium and technomyrmex queens an amount of protein equivalent to the body size. I also provide some honey water, but not too much because mine tend to fall in the dish.


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Hawaiiant (Ben)

Keeper of
Miniature Labradoodle
Baby Wolf Spider
Mud Dauber wasp larvae
Ochetellus Glaber
Solenopsis Geminata
Brachymyrmex Obscurior
Cardiocondyla Emeryi
Tetramorium Bicarinatum
Plagiolepis Alluaudi
Anoplolepis Gracilipes
Technomyrmex Difficilis
Pheidole Megacephala
Aholehole fish
Cowrie snail
Sea Fan Worm
100+ sea squirts
Tree seedlings
Ghost Crab
Day Gecko
Small Fat Centipede
Endemic Lacewing larva
Vernal Pool shrimps

#35 Offline Connectimyrmex - Posted January 28 2017 - 2:48 PM

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Also, some highly predatory semi-claustral ants (pseudomyrmex, for me) just place their eggs in a scattered pile but situated close to their favorite nesting place. The unfertilized ones just have their eggs scattered all over the place (even in the outworld!)


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Hawaiiant (Ben)

Keeper of
Miniature Labradoodle
Baby Wolf Spider
Mud Dauber wasp larvae
Ochetellus Glaber
Solenopsis Geminata
Brachymyrmex Obscurior
Cardiocondyla Emeryi
Tetramorium Bicarinatum
Plagiolepis Alluaudi
Anoplolepis Gracilipes
Technomyrmex Difficilis
Pheidole Megacephala
Aholehole fish
Cowrie snail
Sea Fan Worm
100+ sea squirts
Tree seedlings
Ghost Crab
Day Gecko
Small Fat Centipede
Endemic Lacewing larva
Vernal Pool shrimps

#36 Offline Californian Anter - Posted January 30 2017 - 5:50 PM

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Make a video of her killing a live termite.


Keeper of:

 

Camponotus Vicinus

Prenolepis Imparis

Tetramorium Sp. E x2


#37 Offline CrazyLegs - Posted January 30 2017 - 6:29 PM

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I once had a beautiful Myrmecia nigrocincta queen with several larvae.

It was a month in and all was well when I thought to myself how cool it would be to see her take down a live offering.

I caught a termite worker as I didn't want her to have to take on anything with large mandibles, or the ones that have what looks like a cannon on their forehead that fires formic acid.

 

The scene was set and the queen could smell the termite flesh in the air and started to venture out of her lair.

She approached the termite and to my horror the termite worker sprayed some sort of invisible goo in the face of my queen.

I didn't know a termite worker could do that at the time.

She was clearly affected by it but pressed the assault and made the kill.

I was relieved to see she survived. The termite was even taken back to the larvae and she began to clean herself.

I thought she was fine but found her dead a few days later.

I don't know if the termite killed her but I won't make that mistake again.

Hunting and taking down live prey is for the workers. :)


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#38 Offline Connectimyrmex - Posted January 30 2017 - 6:58 PM

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I wouldn't feed termites to them if I were you. Termites are actually quite strong and you can keep termite queens/kings as fun pets. You could feed grasshopper nymphs, pinhead crickets, waxworms, nonpoisonous caterpillars, etc instead. Termites also aren't very reliable as a food source due to nuptial flights being relatively some time apart.


Hawaiiant (Ben)

Keeper of
Miniature Labradoodle
Baby Wolf Spider
Mud Dauber wasp larvae
Ochetellus Glaber
Solenopsis Geminata
Brachymyrmex Obscurior
Cardiocondyla Emeryi
Tetramorium Bicarinatum
Plagiolepis Alluaudi
Anoplolepis Gracilipes
Technomyrmex Difficilis
Pheidole Megacephala
Aholehole fish
Cowrie snail
Sea Fan Worm
100+ sea squirts
Tree seedlings
Ghost Crab
Day Gecko
Small Fat Centipede
Endemic Lacewing larva
Vernal Pool shrimps

#39 Offline Californian Anter - Posted January 30 2017 - 8:57 PM

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What would a Myrmecia queen hunt naturally in the wild during her founding period?


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Keeper of:

 

Camponotus Vicinus

Prenolepis Imparis

Tetramorium Sp. E x2


#40 Offline CrazyLegs - Posted January 30 2017 - 9:07 PM

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Scavenger.

 

While there may be altercations between a founding queen and other live insects and animals in the wild, the result isn't always in favor of the queen.


Edited by CrazyLegs, January 30 2017 - 9:09 PM.





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