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Queen Ant ID (Leptothorax muscorum) (Richmond, BC, Canada) (2017-05-05)


Best Answer Aaron567 , May 5 2017 - 7:00 PM

Leptothorax muscorum seems to be the closest possiblity. 

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#1 Offline GXF - Posted May 5 2017 - 5:08 PM

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1. Location of collection: Richmond, BC, Canada
2. Date of collection: 2017-05-04
3. Habitat of collection: Forest
4. Length (from head to gaster): 3.5 mm
5. Color, hue, pattern and texture: Brownish black
6. Distinguishing characteristics: 11-segmented antenna with 3-segmented club; Mandible with 6 teeth.

A very tiny queen. It has 6 mandible teeth, so I think it should be Leptothorax. Leptothorax acervorum? Leptothorax muscorum?
 
 
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Habitat:
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Edited by GXF, May 8 2017 - 8:49 PM.


#2 Offline Martialis - Posted May 5 2017 - 6:35 PM

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Myrmica sp.


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#3 Offline Aaron567 - Posted May 5 2017 - 7:00 PM   Best Answer

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Leptothorax muscorum seems to be the closest possiblity. 


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#4 Offline LC3 - Posted May 5 2017 - 7:01 PM

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Leptothorax muscorum.


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#5 Offline Martialis - Posted May 5 2017 - 8:08 PM

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Somehow I misread that measurement as 6mm- whoops.


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#6 Offline GXF - Posted May 6 2017 - 6:23 PM

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Leptothorax muscorum seems to be the closest possiblity.


Leptothorax muscorum.



Thank you guys. How do you tell Leptothorax acervorum and Leptothorax muscorum apart? They look quite similar to me.

#7 Offline VoidElecent - Posted May 6 2017 - 6:53 PM

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Leptothorax muscorum seems to be the closest possiblity.


Leptothorax muscorum.


Thank you guys. How do you tell Leptothorax acervorum and Leptothorax muscorum apart? They look quite similar to me.

 

I believe Leptothorax muscorum are generally slightly smaller, darker and more slender than Leptothorax acervorum. I think this is L. muscorum.

 

Thank you so much for publishing an actually well-formatted and proper ID thread, I just get so happy when I see these. Plus, the pictures are amazing. If you really want to compare this ant to L. muscorum and L. acervorum queens, you can access detailed images of taxonomic castes here and here, respectively.


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#8 Offline Aaron567 - Posted May 6 2017 - 7:04 PM

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I just said L. muscorum rather than L. acervorum because your location looks a lot more likely to have muscorum. 



#9 Offline LC3 - Posted May 6 2017 - 10:47 PM

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Leptothorax muscorum is really common here in Richmond, that forest looks like an ideal habitat for them. I don't think I've ever seen any L. acervorum in Richmond.


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#10 Offline GXF - Posted May 8 2017 - 8:29 PM

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Thanks everyone for the ID help. I'll wait for workers to confirm this ID again.




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