futurebird,
@futurebird@sauropods.win avatar

Found a queen ant on Park Ave. Looks like Prenolepis imparis, or the american winter ant. You can spot queens by their distinctive waddle. She was hustling along the side walk as if on her way to the Chanel store. Now she’s in one of my luxury ant condos— but don’t tell her I’ve moved her out to the Bronx.

futurebird,
@futurebird@sauropods.win avatar

Ethel is cute & round, settling in to her "Luxery ant condo" (It's a test tube.) She enjoyed a little sugar water, now she's in the darkness of the ant drawer. She looks very well-fed, so I think there is a good chance she will lay lots of eggs.

In four or five days I'll check on her again. Sometimes new queens just die. So, many don't like to name a queen until she has her first workers. But I'm cheering for this little urban ant.

The same ant as seen from the side, the photo is more hazy, taken through the test tube, but you can clearly see the shape of her gaster which helped me to confirm the species was Prenolepis imparis
The same ant drinks a bit of water from a cotton ball. Her head is small and shaped like a blunt rain drop coming to a dainty point at the mandibles. Her black eyes are on the large side for such a small head. You can see her wing scars and the mesa shaped hump in her mesonoma where her wing muscles were before she shed her wings.

futurebird,
@futurebird@sauropods.win avatar

Guess who laid eggs! It's Ethel, the Prenolepis imparis ant queen from Park Ave.

She ate the fruit fly I gave her a few days ago so I gave her another. We'll see how she is doing in a week. She lives in my wine fridge because this species likes the cold. They nest super deep underground and can be active and foraging at temperatures as low as 32F, 0C!

I'm keeping her at 65F and she seems to like it.

llewelly,
@llewelly@sauropods.win avatar

@futurebird congratulations!

Graffotti,
@Graffotti@mastodon.social avatar

@futurebird
That's your wine fridge temperature?
In most British office buildings that's the thermostat setting (18 Celsius) 🤔
Maybe that explains our temperament 😎

futurebird,
@futurebird@sauropods.win avatar

@Graffotti

There isn't any wine in it since I mostly use it for ants. It can be set a bit lower ... eg. 45F, but I'm trying to simulate 10feet underground in NY during the spring.

earthlingusa,
@earthlingusa@mas.to avatar

@futurebird Congratulations to you and Ethel. How many babies do you expect?

futurebird,
@futurebird@sauropods.win avatar

@earthlingusa Maybe eight? It's hard to say at this stage.

lienrag,

@futurebird

Thousands or millions ?

@earthlingusa

futurebird,
@futurebird@sauropods.win avatar

@lienrag @earthlingusa

This species tops out at around 1500. Though multi-queen nests may have more.

futurebird,
@futurebird@sauropods.win avatar

She is still doing well. I will leave her for another week or so then check again. She’s a lovely little queen and very fat. She mostly tends her eggs and rests. I hope they become larvae soon.

A golden brown queen ant touches a small pile of eggs with her antennae. She has a small head, black eyes and a large round gaster.

MLE_online,
@MLE_online@social.afront.org avatar

@futurebird this is very exciting!

futurebird, (edited )
@futurebird@sauropods.win avatar

Name the queen ant:

She's a winter ant found on Park Ave. in NYC. She was waddling down the sidewalk in a big hurry. Now she lives in the Bronx.

Pagan_Animist,
@Pagan_Animist@beekeeping.ninja avatar

@futurebird

Jenny

masukomi,
@masukomi@connectified.com avatar

@futurebird “waddling” sounds like Ethel. But walking down park ave with no clothes in the winter definitely doesn’t so… Mika’s my vote.

shekinahcancook,
@shekinahcancook@babka.social avatar

@futurebird

Will she lay eggs and make a colony, or she a spinster?

futurebird,
@futurebird@sauropods.win avatar

@shekinahcancook

I don't see any reason why she wouldn't lay eggs, but we'll need to wait and see. I just fed her some sugar water and put her in a dark drawer.

shekinahcancook,
@shekinahcancook@babka.social avatar

@futurebird

I guess I wondered why she was strolling along there alone - an outcast or looking to make a new colony. Do they ever cast out extra queens?

futurebird,
@futurebird@sauropods.win avatar

@shekinahcancook

I think they may, though alates leaving the nest on the first warm day of spring is also normal

shekinahcancook,
@shekinahcancook@babka.social avatar

@futurebird

Cool.

Edit: I mean, it beats being torn to shreds and thrown into the refuse pile...

futurebird,
@futurebird@sauropods.win avatar

@alexwild

Hey it's one of your girls. This is the full-size kind of queen, yes? Not those little ones you saw in 2015 in the fall?

johnefrancis,
@johnefrancis@mastodon.social avatar

@futurebird you kidnapped their Queen! Can tthe workers of that species cook up a new one? Can that Queen bootstrap a new colony?

futurebird,
@futurebird@sauropods.win avatar

@johnefrancis

Queens don't run around alone (or ever leave the nest at all really) unless they are newly mated and looking to start a colony. Especially this species that digs some of the deepest known nest in this region (Two meters deep!)

I can be confident she's looking for a safe place to lay eggs and has no daughters as of yet.

And since she has no wings she's likely already mated.

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