There are differing methods of starting, caring for, and housing an
ant colony. In the
United States queen ants can be bought from
vendors provided that the seller meets
state and federal requirements, including
USDA permits. If you are in the
UK or in any other
European country, most exotic
species of
ant can be
purchased legally through vendors though it depends on local
laws.
Locating a queen ant The first step involved in
ant keeping is capturing or purchasing a
fertilized queen ant.
Ants engage in
nuptial flights during
spring,
summer, and some
species have also been recorded to have their
nuptial flights during
winter. After these flights a fertilized queen ant will land and remove her wings before locating a spot to found her new
colony. Nuptial flights often happen after a heavy
rain or a drastic seasonal change. If a queen has already chewed her wings off, she is likely (but not certainly)
fertilized. If a queen ant on the ground still has her wings, she is likely unfertilized. A queen ant can be distinguished from an
ergate (worker ant) by the relatively larger size of the
thorax (which at this point contains the wing
muscles of the queen), and the enlarged abdomen which contains
eggs. Beware that certain species have large workers similar in size to a queen;
Pheidologeton diversus, for example, possesses several castes of dinergates (soldier ants). If the possible queen you are looking at has marks on either side of the thorax (wing
scars, where the queen's wings were) it is a queen. If not, it's a supermajor in most cases. In some rare cases, species can have queens without wings at all, like some
Myrmecia species. These are called
ergatoid queens
Housing the queen ant For fully claustral species, the
queen should be sealed in a
dark,
aerated small container with access to
water. One way to provide this environment involves using a
test tube setup. For this you need a test tube, then pour water about 1/3 of the test tube's
volume, then proceed to put a
cotton ball in so that it reaches the water line, put in your queen and seal it off with another cotton ball. This nesting chamber should be kept in the dark for one month while the queen lays her
eggs and tends to them until they hatch. A claustral
ant species need not be fed during this period, as a queen ant will digest her now-useless wing
muscles to provide her with the necessary
energy until her first generation of workers emerges. But feeding a small drop of honey energises the queen ant and reduces the chances of her eating her own eggs. For a semi-claustral
species, which will require
food during this nesting phase,
protein rich foods should be provided intermittently during the pre-worker phase, with the frequency and type of food determined by the specific species of ant.
Moving the ants into a larger housing '' workers traveling between two formicaria through a connector tube. If successful with feeding the first generation of workers, the
queen ant should continue laying
eggs. Eventually (at about 25 worker
ants), the
colony should be moved into a larger housing such as a
formicarium to allow continued growth of the colony. If you wish to put your ants into a setup before this 'worker limit', you may purchase a '
test tube outworld' which will allow them to be fed more easily, while still inside the
test tube. == Caring for ants ==