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Difficulty with Ponera queen.
Started By
Ameise
, Jul 3 2017 12:07 AM
9 replies to this topic
#1
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Posted July 3 2017 - 12:07 AM
I found a tiny Ponera (guessing Ponera pennsylvanica) queen a few days ago. I gave her a small, humid claustral tube which she quickly went into, and attached a tiny outworld with food. For the last few days, she just sat on the wet cotton ball, and today was barely moving. I took her out and gave her sugar water, and she's doing a bit better. I'm not sure what to do, however. Thoughts?
#2
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Posted July 3 2017 - 12:22 AM
considering they are pretty small, use very small food, place it directly in her test tube
#3
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Posted July 3 2017 - 12:59 AM
The thing is... she didn't even leave the cotton ball those three days.
#4
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Posted July 3 2017 - 5:55 AM
Ponera pennsylvanica fly in the fall, so this is probably Hypoponera opacior (depending on your location). Three days is too soon for there to be a problem.
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#5
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Posted July 3 2017 - 6:09 AM
I'm not sure what was wrong. She certainly drank the sugar water I gave her. Prior to that, she was mainly just barely moving and even I had difficulty 'agitating her'. She was just latched onto the wet cotton ball.
#6
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Posted July 3 2017 - 6:37 AM
For semi-claustral queens you have to be really patient. Just feed her once a week or so and eventually she will lay eggs - granted, it's a different species, but a couple of the semi-claustral Stenamma queens I caught back on 5/13 are just starting to lay eggs/get small larvae.
Edited by ultraex2, July 3 2017 - 6:38 AM.
#7
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Posted July 3 2017 - 8:39 AM
My concern was that she was really weak. I had to directly feed her sugar water (which she happily drank) until she was moving OK again. Edit: She's actually surprisingly OK with being handled gently. Never seen a queen like that. Also, neither the queen nor the workers can climb glass. They can barely walk on it.
The setup was/is a 13mm claustral tube that is attached to a very small bit of PVC tubing (which is the 'outworld'). There is a small hole made of epoxy for her to go in and out of in the claustral tube. So, if I feed her, I just put it in the tube outside. However, she showed no interest in anything but that cotton ball.
Oh, ultraex2, if you didn't gather, I found another queen . They're not very difficult to find, just annoying because without a loupe or macro lens, they look no different from a worker... so I ended up capturing about 20 workers before finding a queen randomly.
Edited by Ameise, July 3 2017 - 8:51 AM.
#8
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Posted July 3 2017 - 9:24 AM
Yep!
There are a few colonies of these in my backyard - haven't found a queen yet, though.
#9
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Posted July 3 2017 - 11:37 AM
They don't walk well on glass or plastic, probably why she is sticking to the cotton ball. I would make a small plaster formicarium or at least add plaster the the bottom of the tube.
#10
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Posted July 3 2017 - 1:16 PM
She died overnight, unfortunately. Half of the interior of the glass tube was coated with superglue with a tiny roll of cork on top of it, so she had a surface to walk on.
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