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SoCal LA County - 5/9/25


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2 replies to this topic

#1 Offline chillocean - Posted Today, 12:43 AM

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1. Location (on a map) of collection: San Gabriel, South California
2. Date of collection: 5/9/25
3. Habitat of collection: Indoors
4. Length (from head to gaster): Maybe ~5mm?
5. Color, hue, pattern and texture: Dark brown/black all throughout  

 

 

 

My first time anting, and I was very surprised to see ants indoors like this. There's a heat wave going on, so that might be the cause? I'm afraid that none of the three ants I caught are fertilized, as none of them have their wings off. Is there a way to tell from their appearance if they have mated or not?

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#2 Offline L.H - Posted Today, 4:17 AM

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I'm no expert but I think these look very similar to brachymyrmex patagonicus queens.

Also, there is no way to tell if a queen is fertile from appearances

#3 Offline Stubyvast - Posted Today, 9:37 AM

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Yeah, your best bet for fertility is simply time. If you see eggs and they hatch into proper larvae, you got a fertile queen! 

I also see that sometimes queens will begin cleaning their gaster, and almost always biting off their wings after a week or so, sometimes less. If they do these things, chances are higher for fertility, but this is known to be unreliable. 

I wouldn't worry too much about the wings still being on, just because I have a Lasius niger colony with around 1K workers, and the queen still has part of her wings on.

Good luck!


Currently raising: 

Manica invidia (1 queen +  ~30 workers)

Lasius niger (single queen + ~200+ workers)

Lasius americanus (2 single queen + brood)

Lasius americanus (1 queen + worker, more on the way!)

Tetramorium immigrans (1 queen + ~1200 workers)





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