Saturday, June 6, 2009

Go Outside and Play (Forage)!

About two weeks ago I felt a little guilty about keeping the ants all locked up inside a tiny plastic container, after all they kept insisting on exiting their new little home through the wire mesh on the lid, so I decided to let them have access to the wild open outside world. I stuck a big straw through the wire mesh (securely sealed with hot glue) and then to that attached a big clear plastic tube leading to the outside through a window.


After I completed the connection, I expected the ants to immediately find this new route to the outside and happily stream in and out, so I cleaned out the bits of food that I had placed inside. To my concern, however, they did not wander in and out through the tube but instead seemed to hunker down in their underground terrain, not even coming out to forage within the ant farm itself.

By the end of the first week, I replaced the food bits thinking that they would be starving by now since I still did not see any ants making forays to the outside world. Lo and behold, the ants started munching on the food bits pretty quickly. What I didn't expect, though, was that even tinnier ants started streaming into the ant farm from the outside to get at the bits of shredded pork I had placed. The resident ants all retreated to their underground layer once again and let the small invaders have the run of the place! By the end of the day, all the shredded pork was gone and the tiny ants had moved on.

Last night, I noticed for the first time, a relatively large number of ants moving up and down the tube. Maybe they only come out to forage when the weather is cooler since when I first introduced the tube the weather was fairly warm-hot.

On the inside of the ant farm, I can no longer see any white egg cases so either the ants have move them deeper inside to where I cannot see them or the larva have all developed into adult ants and I was wrong in my assessment that I have a queen ant and that no more eggs are being hatched. I hope that they have just moved them deeper into the nest.

Now that the ants have access to the outside, I shouldn't have to keep feeding them because they can now forage for themselves. I'm kind of curious as to what kinds of things they bring back into the nest because I see some of these same types of ants on my balcony carrying around seeds and bits of plant matter. I guess I'll just have to wait and see.

3 comments:

  1. You Probably didn't get the queen. Every time you get the eggs with worker ants, they will put them in all one position, or the egg chamber. This Chamber usually doesn't have the queens, but the eggs. Or this could be the food chamber. This is where the leftover food goes.

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  2. And yes, keep us updated with videos! I might be wrong myself!

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  3. I absolutely love your videos and your whole ant farm experiments. It is soooo nice to see you try this all out and let me see the flaws with your experiment before I try it myself. I actually did an ant experiment that you would probley find quite offensive and now looking back on the experiment I would probly approve of it myself... but it won 1st place at the National Future Farmers of America Agriscience Fair 2007. It involved ant populations and insecticidal baits. My tumblr acct is ohserenade.tumblr.com and email is familia_de_sarena@yahoo.com if you are interested in what my experiment entailed or resulted with. I am sad to see that your last video was in 2010. Please don't stop obsessing with ants. This is fascinating.

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