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Invertebrate Pet Talk
My ant keeping hobby.
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<blockquote data-quote="Avicularia Kael" data-source="post: 177764" data-attributes="member: 28481"><p>Oh, I am in the U.S. so that would be illegal for me, but there is an alternate be species here called Lasius neoniger and it is only different from L. niger genetically and by where it lives.</p><p></p><p>Might as well update this:</p><p>The Formica have only one pupae, so the other larva must have been fed to it.</p><p>Ponera is doing fine. I think she still only has eggs. They take a while to develop compared to other species.</p><p>I collected a Temnothorax longispinosus colony that was living in a twig. This is a tiny species that lives in twigs, acorns, and stuff like that. They probably have about 20 workers, lots of brood, and 1 queen. They are quite active too.</p><p>My neighbor has a Temnothorax cf. curvispinosus colony. ( I would have to see the queen for a proper ID)</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Avicularia Kael, post: 177764, member: 28481"] Oh, I am in the U.S. so that would be illegal for me, but there is an alternate be species here called Lasius neoniger and it is only different from L. niger genetically and by where it lives. Might as well update this: The Formica have only one pupae, so the other larva must have been fed to it. Ponera is doing fine. I think she still only has eggs. They take a while to develop compared to other species. I collected a Temnothorax longispinosus colony that was living in a twig. This is a tiny species that lives in twigs, acorns, and stuff like that. They probably have about 20 workers, lots of brood, and 1 queen. They are quite active too. My neighbor has a Temnothorax cf. curvispinosus colony. ( I would have to see the queen for a proper ID) [/QUOTE]
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Tarantula Forum Topics
Invertebrate Pet Talk
My ant keeping hobby.
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