Pictures:Tetramorium Fungus https://imgur.com/a/Q64FY
Edited by Aquaexploder, October 4 2017 - 1:13 PM.
Best Answer Batspiderfish , October 4 2017 - 2:53 PM
You can't really identify fungi without a microscope and sometimes chemical testing. As just a guess, this looks like something that consumed the queen after she had become weakened or had died for other reasons.
Go to the full postEdited by Aquaexploder, October 4 2017 - 1:13 PM.
Some of my dead queens have done that.
You can't really identify fungi without a microscope and sometimes chemical testing. As just a guess, this looks like something that consumed the queen after she had become weakened or had died for other reasons.
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.
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Black lives still matter.
Proverbs 6:6-8 New International Version (NIV)
6 Go to the ant, you sluggard;
consider its ways and be wise!
7 It has no commander,
no overseer or ruler,
8 yet it stores its provisions in summer
and gathers its food at harvest.
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