My second queen came yesterday another Messor Barbarus but a Fire red sold as with 1-5 workers. (will live in a separate habitat or the queens would fight)
already at a stage the first one probably won't reach for 3 months.
Messor barbarus is a species of harvester ant native to Southern Europe and Northern Africa. The "fire red" or "red selection" refers to a variant of Messor barbarus with a more pronounced red coloration on the queen and/or some workers, particularly in the head and abdomen. This variant is often bred and sold by ant keepers and suppliers
Also bought a red pen torch designed for map reading 635nm wavelength which should be outside of ants visible frequencies (Weltool M6-RD Red)
Yesterday welfare check when they arrived, looks like a huge brood being tended for their, right side I'm guessing is part of a dead insect and 2 chia seeds
Video from this morning.
Doesn't seem like they reacted to the light at all, left side is the wet side with water behind a cotton wool bung, right side is the dry side that lets air in and moisture out.
Not much happening, just taking care of the brood (eggs, larvae, pupae)
their life stages are.
Some species spin a cocoon of silk for the final stage, but these just don't care and stay naked.
First workers are always small the queen is living on her wing muscles for food stores to feed them, they are called "nanites"
they are tiny and get exhausted fast
future workers will be given better nutrition and care so will be bigger, sometimes one will be especially well cared for and he will become a Major or "soldier ant" as people call them
but that probably won't happen until after 50-100 workers, and the queen will limit how many are allowed.
Hope you document your ant colony @arknor
I expect you probably already watch it but the youtube channel Ants Canada, or something, has some incredible videos. He started with lots of ant colonies but recently has built an incredible multi-species environment. That series is well worth a watch
I doubt I will document it, maybe post pics or short videos in "this instant and moment" sometimes.
Yea I watched some of his videos when doing research for how much effort it really is too look after them etc.