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Strange Ant Drone


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8 replies to this topic

#1 Offline ponerinecat - Posted September 1 2018 - 9:29 PM

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Date: 9/1/2018, 8:30-9:00

Location: Attracted to lights in house, presumably came from nearby pine forests, manzanita chaparral, or oak forests

Length: Slightly shorter than the width of a dime, roughly a half inch

Orange in color, but slightly darker than the fruit. Abdomen tipped and banded, almost like a wasp. Hair covering body, and wings have a dark spot on the sides.Mandibles clearly present and curved. Abdomen connected by a waist that looks like the stem of some leaves, with a cup like part connecting the abdomen.

 

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#2 Offline ponerinecat - Posted September 1 2018 - 9:32 PM

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Don't know what it is. I want to see what ant this would be in anticipation of a queen.



#3 Offline LC3 - Posted September 1 2018 - 10:47 PM

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According to Ziess it's possibly a male velvet wasp. It looks like a species of nocturnal Sphaeropthalminae.



#4 Online gcsnelling - Posted September 2 2018 - 3:53 AM

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Yes this is one of the nocturnal velvet ant males.



#5 Offline ponerinecat - Posted September 2 2018 - 9:19 AM

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I was hoping it was stigmatomma. 



#6 Offline sirjordanncurtis - Posted September 2 2018 - 12:55 PM

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Lol, I found one today as well.



#7 Offline TennesseeAnts - Posted May 7 2019 - 5:14 PM

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I find female velvet ants in my yard everywhere. Some reaching 20 millimeters.

#8 Offline Alacom - Posted May 15 2019 - 10:36 PM

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I find female velvet ants in my yard everywhere. Some reaching 20 millimeters.


Lucky. The only velvet ant species I’ve found are a little over 10mm
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#9 Offline TennesseeAnts - Posted May 16 2019 - 8:08 AM

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I find female velvet ants in my yard everywhere. Some reaching 20 millimeters.


Lucky. The only velvet ant species I’ve found are a little over 10mm

I don't feel lucky!!! I almost got stung last year while checking the mail! You can't walk barefoot here in the summer.




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