



I just caught this queen not 30 minutes ago (about 6:30 PM) while walking home from a college class. She reminds me of Solenopsis invicta, but I'm not completely sure what species she is.
She was wandering around on a sidewalk right next to a long bed of river rocks along a building. I don't have a picture of the place, but it was a fair distance (for an ant) from any plants (at least 20-30 yards from the nearest lawn or tree).
I don't have precise measurements, but, again, I've added pictures of her with my keyboard for size referencing. She's larger than the Trachymyrmex septentrionalis queens I've caught over the past week, but not nearly as big as Camponotus floridanus.
The main reason I think she isn't Solenopsis is her coloration. She's dull orange and black, but with intricate designs on her gaster and thorax. Her thorax is orange on the top with a mix of black and orange lines running from her head to her thorax— it's sort of mottled. Her gaster is primarily black, but it has three orange rings around it. It also has an orange area at the spot where it meets her waist, with a black dot in the middle of it. I think it looks like the Eye of Sauron. On the bottom side of her gaster, directly under the "eye", there's an orange "M".
She's actively moving around in the test tube I caught her in; I'm about to prepare one with water in it for her. I can clearly see the bumps that are her petiole and postpetiole. Her thorax and gaster are covered in small hairs (I can't tell if there's hair on her head or legs).
Edited by JFowler, October 4 2016 - 3:22 PM.