Ant Room Tour | Argentine Ants

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  • čas přidán 28. 06. 2024
  • In this ant keeping documentary, we take an extensive look into the happenings of my huge Argentine Ant colony (Linepithema humile). Housed in one of our MEGA-sized acrylic nests. Caught and raised up from just a handful of queens over 1 year ago…now I’d estimate they’re at least 20,000 thousand strong!
    MY WEBSITE / SOCIAL MEDIA LINKS
    Linktree - linktr.ee/jordandeanfilms
    Watch More Ant Room Tours Here - • Ant Room Tours
    VIDEO CREDITS
    Written, narrated, filmed and edited by Jordan Dean.
    MUSIC CREDITS
    Kevin MacLeod - (incompetech.com)
    Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
    creativecommons.org/licenses/b...

Komentáře • 1,1K

  • @noahjuniorgaming3494
    @noahjuniorgaming3494 Před 3 lety +50

    8:13
    Larva: where is mommy ?
    Worker: don't worry just eat your food

  • @nathanrieck2112
    @nathanrieck2112 Před 6 lety +7

    Where I live in California I would say that Argentine ants are the most common ant you see walking around. They make long trails and travel long distances when they are out looking for food. A few months back I was out on a walk and was lucky enough to see a massive colony moving, they had several nest openings all along a side walk and were moving all their eggs, brood, and pupil into a hole in the base of a tree. It was really cool watching them move and what made it even more exciting to me was seeing all the virgin queens and male alates walking along and moving into the new nest site. Argentine ants are small in comparison to some ants but tough. I’ve seen them in an ant war before with several of them hanging onto the legs of much larger ants, very cool and fascinating, but sad to see native carpenter ants displaced.

    • @MistaGSpecialEducation
      @MistaGSpecialEducation Před 24 dny

      As an antkeeper, I dislike Argentine ants. They wiped out the entire Harvester population in the area where i live.

  • @kaydendobson6725
    @kaydendobson6725 Před 6 lety +116

    I’m loving these ant room tours! 😃

  • @AmazingAnts
    @AmazingAnts Před 6 lety +358

    These ants are going to rule the world! Great documentary :)

    • @JordanDeanFilms
      @JordanDeanFilms  Před 6 lety +42

      Thanks! Let's hope not :o

    • @CN-kf8xj
      @CN-kf8xj Před 6 lety +6

      Amazing Ants Not just in people liking them but literally going to rule the world!

    • @WRGOP
      @WRGOP Před 6 lety +1

      Then there would be only one species of ants on earth

    • @nomercy452
      @nomercy452 Před 6 lety

      Amazing Ants

    • @mattheworchard-groves9521
      @mattheworchard-groves9521 Před 6 lety +1

      Amazing Ants I love your videos man! I hope your channel grows as big as Ants Australia!

  • @gamejunk2707
    @gamejunk2707 Před 5 lety +33

    8:10 that’s a strong worker ant carrying like 3 to 4 times her body weight.

    • @gelwaregeorge2685
      @gelwaregeorge2685 Před 4 lety +4

      ants can lift 10 - 50 times their body weight

    • @blinkemonke8520
      @blinkemonke8520 Před 3 lety

      Tbh I don't think the queen isn't that heavy.

    • @aidangm7419
      @aidangm7419 Před 3 lety

      GelWare Entertainment driver ants can lift 100 times their weight when lifting a small twig

    • @wildlifeisthewealthofnatur5457
      @wildlifeisthewealthofnatur5457 Před 2 lety

      I had seen a pheidole ant carrying a pumpkin seed more than 20 times it's size alone.

  • @ant.invasion
    @ant.invasion Před 6 lety +111

    This Aus Ants nostalgia is just too great to be true, makes me feel so good inside. Great video Jordan can’t wait for DIY build next video 😁

    • @playerone1450
      @playerone1450 Před 6 lety +1

      Ant Invasion love your vids ant invasion 😄

  • @ZecharyK
    @ZecharyK Před 4 lety +6

    We need a timelapse of them going through that protein jelly.

  • @usagifang
    @usagifang Před 5 lety +195

    Ants kills their queen? Welp. Viva la Antolution

  • @Jinxtah123
    @Jinxtah123 Před 6 lety +69

    This was endlessly fascinating. I really love these colony tours, and I've never had a colony of my own. I'd love to find out what the deal was with those tiny mites. Please update us if you ever find out.

  • @CReadiusPro
    @CReadiusPro Před 6 lety +50

    That giant nest would make an amazing coffee table.

    • @Squidward558
      @Squidward558 Před 3 lety +11

      Sounds cool but all the vibrations would disturb the hell out of them.

  • @nordicants6232
    @nordicants6232 Před 6 lety +115

    Great video jordan :o

  • @10191927
    @10191927 Před 6 lety +7

    That colony set up is really impressive. I think you should offer something like this, it’s very impressive.

  • @cloudinfinity
    @cloudinfinity Před 6 lety +9

    Great video, Jordan! Those little mites are definitely interesting. It always amazes me how these types of creatures just appear out of seemingly no where (I'm assuming you didn't introduce them!).
    As for your contest, I'm from Southern Ontario in Canada. I would have to say that the two species that I see most often is Tetramorium (Pavement Ants) and Camponotus pennsylvanicus. I just recently acquired the Camponotus colony and they've currently taking their winter nap. One neat thing that they did when I placed them into their current home was one worker brought in a bunch of dirt from their outworld and closed off one of the rooms providing moisture... I guess this is a species that prefers a dry nest. I thought that this was a pretty cool adaptation! As for my Tetramorium species, I caught the queen back in late July and they're not about 15 workers strong. They're pretty picky with their food, definitely fun experimenting - they're currently loving small bits of almond. They're they're a bit larger in colony size, I hope to move them into my classroom so that my students can watch them grow too.

  • @cuzhe5696
    @cuzhe5696 Před 3 lety +4

    I can just imagine one day when you decide to put them down in a freezer everything starts to get cold and everyone around you starts slowing down and then start dying.

    • @s1l3nt22
      @s1l3nt22 Před 3 lety

      That’s just creepy 😳

    • @tranvietphu1298
      @tranvietphu1298 Před 2 lety

      They will die because they are a tropical species, temperate species on the other hand will only slow down and into hibernation to save power

  • @tergy
    @tergy Před 6 lety +51

    If that colony has 20000 workers, you should imagine colonies with millions of workers that exist a lot in the wild. Thats over a 100 more of those nests from the video!
    Btw, does anybody know the biggest colony in captivity?

    • @SerafineSilverstream
      @SerafineSilverstream Před 6 lety +20

      The biggest argentine colony is in Europe and it stretches over 6000 kilometers from southern Spain to Greece. No idea how many billion workers that colony has though.

    • @melbourneroblox3448
      @melbourneroblox3448 Před 5 lety +1

      From what I know this is the biggest captive colony

    • @brandiquesenberry2292
      @brandiquesenberry2292 Před 5 lety +6

      Fire nation has millions of ants

    • @andreasurace4386
      @andreasurace4386 Před 4 lety +3

      Brandi Quesenberry “the fire nation” is but one of many captive fire ant colonies

    • @moddedcrafter1979
      @moddedcrafter1979 Před 4 lety +2

      There is a super colony in China of 1 trillion queen and 300 trillion worker ants

  • @peterrawlins4087
    @peterrawlins4087 Před 6 lety +5

    Los Angeles, Glendale, California. Honey pot ants so interesting how they use themselves as storage containers to keep there food and water from expiring and safe from getting infested or molding. Love your videos :)

  • @ragerancher
    @ragerancher Před 4 lety +8

    It would be fascinating to know at each moment in time what any individual ant is trying to do as they wander around.

  • @TheScienceguy77
    @TheScienceguy77 Před 6 lety +3

    Never stop making videos, these are amazing. Keep up the great work Ants Australia!

  • @memedumpster1402
    @memedumpster1402 Před 4 lety +6

    You honestly deserve so much more attention then you get. Keep it up this is just such high quality work!

  • @willowtan7113
    @willowtan7113 Před 6 lety +1

    I have been long awaiting this video. I do the same exact thing. My neighborhood is absolutely FILLED with Argentine ants. When I first started this hobby, I was so disheartened since I couldn't find any other species other than Argentine ants, which do not fly, meaning I could not capture my own young queen. Today, I have a couple slow growing camponotus I bought, but my favorite is a collection of Argentine colonies I have joined together. They would have been killed, and so I captured as many as I could instead, before they were sprayed, several with several colonies. I absolutely love them since the colony is so big and all I have ever wanted from this hobby is to have a big enough colony that no matter what, if I feed them or look at them, they are sure to be something amazing and interesting. Plus they do not hibernate, and that is a bonus. Should we make a superhero team named the "humanitarian Argentine ant resistance"? Instead of killing your giant colony, maybe you should give them to a museum or research group? The museum can show them off, like leafcutter ants are often used. Or a research group could learn tons just like you did, or use the incredible population to be able to do tests with no need to wait for more workers. Who knows? Another cool thing is that the colonies are immortal. The queens will have their own elates, but the other queens in the colony will also have their own, so there won't be inbreeding. The huge amount of queens and their strange breeding style allows Argentine ant queens to be one of the few, if not only, species that you can actually "breed". Pretty cool when you think about it, huh? Well, I have gone on forever now, so that's enough. Love your channel dude!

  • @Au_Aquatica
    @Au_Aquatica Před 6 lety +6

    Great video Jordan! And that's a massive colony! I am almost afraid of them 😂

  • @fullthrottle2354
    @fullthrottle2354 Před 6 lety +2

    The most abundant native ant species in the suburbs of Houston, Texas is easily Twig Ants (Pseudomyrmex gracilis). They’re almost like the bull ants of the Americas, except about 1/3 of the size. They’ve got the vision and amazing grip, too!
    Fun Facts: Their preferred nesting spaces are in acorns or hollow twigs. The queens look almost exactly like a worker, but have darker gasters.

    • @reidgoodwin3937
      @reidgoodwin3937 Před 2 lety

      you also live in Houston Texas leaf cutter ants live at Huntsville State park if you wanna keep them their native.

  • @nicocuyano10
    @nicocuyano10 Před 6 lety

    Man, your passion can be felt in your videos. You are awesome.

  • @user-df8hl4zx2l
    @user-df8hl4zx2l Před 6 lety +2

    I always wanted to start in the art of ant keeping, and I still will in the future. Thanks for the great videos!

  • @l3oogle
    @l3oogle Před 6 lety +4

    The most abundant ant species in my area is Rytidoponera Metallica. I was sitting round a campfire once got stung over 10 times on my feet, who knew there was a nest there? They are everywhere in my area and the queens are hard to tell apart from the workers which makes quite frustrating to find/raise. I have however been lucky enough to find a queen not too long ago. I love that they semi-claustral because it makes raising them much more interactive, also many ants are soft and delicate, but Ritdo.P have extremely hard exoskeletons which makes them easier to catch. Somthing I've noticed from observation is that there colours are not perfectly uniform, some are darker and slightly blue and some are your classic green. It's abit frustrating seeing them all the time when I go anting instead of the other species I'm after, but I'd definitely miss them if they weren't around. Definitely one of my fravorites! :)

    • @cassandrabarrott8692
      @cassandrabarrott8692 Před 6 lety +1

      Sam A I’ve just started raising a colony of that species myself and have been fascinated to find out that the freshly emerged workers are almost brown! So far I only have a queen and her 3 nanatics but I plan to keep her for quite a while

  • @bradenfriesen488
    @bradenfriesen488 Před 6 lety +5

    The most common ant in my area is fire ants and Argentine ants, both of them are invasive. I'm from central valley California and I plan on being an entomologist. There are many other kinds of ants in my area, but most of them are fire ants and Argentine ants. I like watching and feeding both kinds of ants because of the way that all the workers instantly help each other when one ant spots an attacker or food.
    Fun fact: Fire ants are from the genus Solenopsis which sounds similar to the chemical compound that they sting with called Solenopsin

    • @anniebrooks2166
      @anniebrooks2166 Před 5 lety

      Entomoloscope well I've never seen Argentine ants in the valley

  • @James-tv2bm
    @James-tv2bm Před 4 lety +1

    I would literally watch these ants for hours... great video!

  • @Tatsugiri6783
    @Tatsugiri6783 Před rokem +1

    After learning about argies, tactics, survival, escape learning, and keeping them in SoCal, i have noticed queens die by their own workers

  • @themicroplanetblog1316
    @themicroplanetblog1316 Před 4 lety +28

    7:46
    Queen: Oh hi lowly worker
    Worker: Hello, your majesty. Me and my sisters have decided that you are too much work to care for and we'd be better off caring for someone else.
    Queen: Wait, what? You can't just leave me!
    Worker: Exactly.
    Queen: o_o
    Worker: :)

  • @jamesmontanus7873
    @jamesmontanus7873 Před 6 lety +6

    Hey Jordan an amazing video once again! really love the video, a common ant species in Singapore is actually phidole or Big-headed ants, they dominate every corner of my area and keep getting into my ant room XD despite their very aggressive behaviour in my area, they are an incredibly fascinating species to watch and I love their use of the majors in combat and consumption of food! Great vid Jordan keep it up! #roadto50K

    • @luckykaloo7435
      @luckykaloo7435 Před 6 lety

      Wow... I live in sembawang and must say ghost ants for indoor and campo sp. outdoor

  • @AntsSA
    @AntsSA Před 6 lety +2

    For contest. The super common native lepisiota Capensis where I live are pushing out these these also super common Argentine ants that took over just a few years ago with their own super colonies. :)
    Also messor Capensis &sraititifrons, anoplolepis iridescent, Cardiocondya sp. Are in small colonies every where and last but not least solonopsis punctaticeps.
    I live in cape town south Africa

  • @Jaybiiird
    @Jaybiiird Před 6 lety

    Beautiful footage!! Been super hyped for this vid to come out!

  • @dinosaurterrorworld144
    @dinosaurterrorworld144 Před 6 lety +28

    Love your videos there awesome and amazing keep up the amazing and fantastic and awesome work mate😁😁👍👍👍👏👏😁👍

  • @alptekinakturk4185
    @alptekinakturk4185 Před 4 lety +85

    Who's here after Kurzgesagt?

    • @tiedupsmurf
      @tiedupsmurf Před 4 lety +5

      Nope !! I'm here to find out how native ant species are doing, but no answers here...great video though...Oh and apart from the cringy inflecting narration as bad as that ant Canada dude, talking like he is on Sesame Street and I am watching thinking bad things...bad bad bad

    • @icecreamtonk786
      @icecreamtonk786 Před 4 lety +2

      O O but why? Why would u say that dude?

    • @antloversscotland7705
      @antloversscotland7705 Před 4 lety +2

      me

    • @okoverlord928
      @okoverlord928 Před 4 lety

      @@tiedupsmurf ok

    • @icecreamtonk786
      @icecreamtonk786 Před 4 lety +2

      Mabye

  • @Deathbyfartz
    @Deathbyfartz Před 5 lety +1

    youve got some solid production quality and naration going on here, very informational :)

  • @yingzhu5576
    @yingzhu5576 Před 6 lety +1

    Hello Jordan, I am Ying Zhu from New York City, Brooklyn. The most common ants in my area are Tetramorium Immigrans, pavement ants, as expected from a city like New York. They were previously mixed with the European Tetramorium Caespitum since taxonomist could not tell if the two were different, North America vs European. And in 2017 they manage to figure it out and grant them their new official name. Like Tetramorium Caespitums they enjoy living in pavement and their wars are a sight to behold. Often in the spring and summer as I walk casually on the street, I would see a massive Ipad Pro sized or even larger mass of ants, Tetramoriums having a war. You can poke them or blow on them or shine light on them and they will completely not care, caught up in their war for territory. What makes this even more interesting is that they seem to only behave this way to each other. Tetramoriums are “invasive” in the sense they were introduced via shipping from Europe to U.S.A over time, go figure (The relationship of U.S.A and Europe goes way back after all). However, they have been safety integrate themselves and blend in into the ecosystem, in a friendly way without pushing out native species. Yet this friendliness shatters when a Tetramorium colony finds another, both colonies break out into a huge Tetramorium war. I find this behavior very fascinating. Unfortunately, I cannot get a picture of them since it is deep hibernation period here in North America, nor do I own a colony but they are interesting little packages of aggression nonetheless. And their appetite is also very amusing, being pavement ants in the city I often find them eating junk food, like soda, french fries, hamburgers, potato chips and even pizza sometimes, and it is always awesome watching how they handle each food. The city life belongs to the omnivores, those who eat anything.
    Thank You for holding this awesome contest. Best of luck everyone

  • @AntsManitoba
    @AntsManitoba Před 6 lety +61

    Bro 13:06 is the waste moving???????

    • @mrridley8967
      @mrridley8967 Před 6 lety +15

      Ants Manitoba omg living shit

    • @dtazombies1166
      @dtazombies1166 Před 6 lety +2

      Ants Manitoba I was thinking that lol

    • @bidoovs9848
      @bidoovs9848 Před 6 lety +8

      its those weird bugs underneath, moving around

    • @mrridley8967
      @mrridley8967 Před 6 lety +15

      TheDrawingBidoof- TDB no im 100% certain as a man of science that the shit is alive

    • @AntsNewZealand
      @AntsNewZealand Před 6 lety

      i think theyre maggots

  • @mrayrick7631
    @mrayrick7631 Před 4 lety +3

    Where did you get theese ants?

  • @odeivonimajneb
    @odeivonimajneb Před 6 lety +1

    Hey thanks for the awesome video! I watched it twice. Very informative. I’ve learned a lot from your channel. Please keep post more awesome videos!

  • @mr.mercury4247
    @mr.mercury4247 Před 5 lety +1

    I was wondering why their poo was... pulsating and fluctuating..... I'm glad you explained about the mites. The colony most likely understands the importance of their waste removal.

  • @oppolight9992
    @oppolight9992 Před 6 lety +5

    I live in South Tasmania and the most common ants i find are Technomyrmex, most people in my area call them Small Black ants. (i know, it's really creative) but i'm even raising a colony of them and found out that they really love the honeydew that the aphids have. The rose bushes are usually full of these ants and i love watching them through my window. it's hard to tell witch species they really are because I see big ones and really small ones.
    and that is really all i have to say.
    Keep up the great work Jordan!

    • @rockdealer1
      @rockdealer1 Před 5 lety

      Technomyrmex is such a badass name!

    • @Versuffe
      @Versuffe Před 4 lety

      Mr Camponotus I do they are also called black crazy ants cuz they go crazy easily

    • @andreasurace4386
      @andreasurace4386 Před 4 lety

      Tyler MG / Tyler mega games technomyrmex are NOT black crazy ants, black crazy ants fall under the name paratrachina longicornis

  • @trueprogamer3018
    @trueprogamer3018 Před 6 lety +56

    Yay! Your making videos again XD

  • @thingshappen4015
    @thingshappen4015 Před 6 lety

    Great videoes. You are my favorite commentator out of all the other you-tubers that document ants. You always have such great content and watching your videos is what got me into ant keeping in the first place.

  • @willowtan7113
    @willowtan7113 Před 6 lety +2

    YASSS I HAVE WAITED SO LONG FOR THIS

  • @-Alluvium-
    @-Alluvium- Před 5 lety +13

    5:40 IF SHE BREATHES...

  • @DRL3335
    @DRL3335 Před 5 lety +28

    Larvae: What are we eating today?
    Worker: oh nothing... just your mother who couldn’t suffice our needs...
    No but really this is a sad survival strategy😭

  • @urg-1578
    @urg-1578 Před 5 lety +1

    Man, this is why Australia is great for ant keeping I wish I lived there.

  • @-.._.-_...-_.._-..__..._.-.-.-

    Nice observations! Thank you for the tour, and I really like this formicarium.

  • @gamergames8073
    @gamergames8073 Před 6 lety +4

    I am getting a colony of honeypot ants, is their any way your next ant room tour could be on them?

  • @fergusrann
    @fergusrann Před 6 lety +3

    I live in the south eastern suburbs of Melbourne and the most common ant species around my area are Paratrechina longicornis otherwise known as the black crazy ant. I love there curiosity and the way they move around in large groups. 1 thing I’ve learnt about them is that they as I said are very curious and eat whatever they are capable of eating and there small size doesn’t make it to difficult to get into homes were you will usually find them eating your leftover scraps having them around has taught me to not leave any food in my room as there sense of smell is very good and they will find a way in to eat it.
    Another great video Jordan, best of luck to everyone else entering the giveaway👍🏻👍🏻🙂

  • @tiathetimid6447
    @tiathetimid6447 Před 3 lety

    I used to live in South Carolina USA. We have Fire Ants. One thing I noticed is when it’s about to rain depending on the direction they build a wall up on that side to help protect the entrance.

  • @DeadshotWally
    @DeadshotWally Před 4 lety +1

    I really love ants seeing this puts a smile on face 😀

  • @viralvibinn
    @viralvibinn Před 6 lety +6

    hey awesome video, and I am still thinking how his colony became so big so fast!, sick! colony though, and the nest is also dope!, ahh so jealous coz I can't find this species, but I hope this colony will be more big fast, and are these colonies immortal?, if any one knows then please reply me :)

    • @antsant4060
      @antsant4060 Před 6 lety

      antscanadas fire ant colony.

    • @abelvidales5874
      @abelvidales5874 Před 6 lety

      I hope you dont. This ants are ant killers. They killed my half of my ants!

    • @willowtan7113
      @willowtan7113 Před 6 lety

      Ants Multinational yes they are

    • @antsant4060
      @antsant4060 Před 6 lety

      I found a colony of odorless house ant that was moving and there was like 25 queens I didn't collect it because I'm new to ant keeping.

    • @willowtan7113
      @willowtan7113 Před 6 lety

      Nicole Garcia rip. I have so many similar stories. Don't miss it till you know you had it!

  • @elephantseal2657
    @elephantseal2657 Před 5 lety +5

    "For ants, sanitation is vitally important"
    *ant* *procedes* *to* *lick* *poop* *off* *his* *legs*

    • @pepe371
      @pepe371 Před 4 lety +1

      I can assure u that's not what they do they crap in a specified place and they know how to take a 💩

  • @antsplann
    @antsplann Před 3 lety

    Wow, astonishing images! Also all I was looking for about Linepithema humile🐜🐜

  • @EliasNatureStuff
    @EliasNatureStuff Před 6 lety

    Great video as usual, informative and fun!

  • @gijsmensen6733
    @gijsmensen6733 Před 5 lety +3

    The dead queen had a mite :(

  • @RareEpicness
    @RareEpicness Před 6 lety +2

    What the f*ck. This is why I love ants. I actually have an iPad keyboard with an ant in the background cuz I like them so much haha.

  • @Archnemesis88
    @Archnemesis88 Před 4 lety

    Love your videos, amazing quality!

  • @twothirdsanexplosive
    @twothirdsanexplosive Před 4 lety

    Really appreciate your exposition about collecting ants native and invasive. Important to keep the native ecology!

  • @josiahkilburn6091
    @josiahkilburn6091 Před 6 lety +61

    Don't put the ants down! You should find a professional myrmecologist that is willing to take them. This way you don't have to degrade your image as an antkeeper. You also help the myrmecologist study the ants. You also can ship them if you are giving to a myrmecologist.

    • @no-rr3ih
      @no-rr3ih Před 6 lety

      .

    • @josiahkilburn6091
      @josiahkilburn6091 Před 6 lety +3

      You can also give them to a museum

    • @woolensnail2584
      @woolensnail2584 Před 6 lety +5

      I think this is a good idea as they can study they’re behaviour and work out how they’re so invasive and how to keep the numbers low etc.

    • @kontoname
      @kontoname Před 6 lety +18

      It's an invasive species. There is no shortage for them and any myrmecologist who needs a few can get as many he likes easily. The risk of them escaping during the transport is much higher.
      You may not realize just how extremely dangerous this species is.

    • @mioserenity5062
      @mioserenity5062 Před 5 lety +13

      What do you mean by "degrade your image as an antkeeper" I don't really get it.

  • @towelcob7841
    @towelcob7841 Před 6 lety +3

    notification squad

  • @jarvislee998
    @jarvislee998 Před 6 lety +1

    Amazing lwish l had that enclosure and my Argentinian ants are growing great

  • @noahcallins4595
    @noahcallins4595 Před 6 lety

    Amazing video once again Jordan! I'm from Idaho and the most common species here is Tetramorium immigrans. Also known as Tetramorium sp.E. This summer i fed a colony almost every night. I noticed for dry foods, they bring it to there nest and buried it. They would also gather seeds from trees and eat them. They also use there numbers ALOT and very aggressive. And they had multiple nest entrances bullied other species.

  • @northernants239
    @northernants239 Před 6 lety +3

    #NotificationSquad

  • @balyeeticus8953
    @balyeeticus8953 Před 6 lety

    Yesss i have been waiting for this!

  • @elijahwood3564
    @elijahwood3564 Před 6 lety

    the Red Imported Fire Ant and I found them in oklahoma they are all over trees and under logs ,its so fun to watch them walk , there Gaster looks like a heart lol I love them soooooo much .

  • @weepclan4652
    @weepclan4652 Před 6 lety +28

    DONT U DARE KILL YUR ANTS!!! THAY ARE YUR PRECIOUS BABIES!!!
    like if you agree

    • @hpenvy1106
      @hpenvy1106 Před 6 lety +1

      The Gangster Pickles Like those excessiv queens they Just slaughter, they need to go. Otherwise they will displace the native species

    • @JordanDeanFilms
      @JordanDeanFilms  Před 6 lety +1

      We've contacted Melbourne Museum, if they don't take them then, unfortunately, we'll be putting them down. They are an invasive species after all.

  • @rause8622
    @rause8622 Před 6 lety

    Solenopsis invicta called the red imported fire ant has to be the most common in central Texas here in America, you can’t take 10 steps without seeing a large ant hill full of them. They are an invasive species from South America but have actually become my first colony, catching a queen a few months ago she is close to having her first generation of workers, extremely excited I’m actually using the tubs and tubes set up you showed on this channel. Huge fan of the channel keep it up!

  • @Nutticus
    @Nutticus Před 6 lety

    The most common ant in Tucson Arizona is probably the harvester ant (Novemessor cockerelli). These ants are amazing and keep graineries in their nests filled with various nuts, used to feed their larvae and workers. They also avoid going into houses and extremely urban places and prefer to be in a more natural undisturbed. They also find staple foods that they depend upon until there is a shortage in which they find a more abundant staple food.

  • @rileysaxton1170
    @rileysaxton1170 Před 6 lety

    For me in New York, the most common species has to be Tetramorium caespitum. These little guys are everywhere, and you can hardly turn a corner on the sidewalk without seeing a colony (unless it's winter like now). These guys have been my favorite ants to keep due to their fast growth. They haven't turned down a single type of food I've offered them, and they're super resilient. One time (this was before my queen had any workers) I had to go on a thirteen day trip, and there was no way our housecleaner was going to care for my ants. On top of that, the test tube had almost no water, and the queen was running low on fat reserves. So, I tried to move her (didn't work), gave her some honey and prayed she would be alright. I came back home, and she had an astounding ten workers! She was extremely weak and there was zero water left. They still wouldn't move, so I force-moved them (just held their test tube over a larger one and tapped). They're fine now in hibernation, but I haven't been able to move them since.

  • @carolynhill5938
    @carolynhill5938 Před 3 lety

    My favorite ant is one I regularly encountered in the mountains and forests I grew up in as a kid, the carpenter ant (Camponotus laevigatus)! Their big, shiny, obsidian black bodies are so cool and I loved watching them in their big sawdust fill nests that always smelled good. Thank you for the question! It brought back good memories!
    (P.s. I’m from the Californian-Oregon border in the USA :) )

  • @christopherdaniel7968
    @christopherdaniel7968 Před 4 lety

    I'm in north texas and I have a colony of these Argentine ants by my house that I found when trying to look for Queens for my new set up

  • @clamskaboo5120
    @clamskaboo5120 Před 6 lety

    LOVE the diversity of insects in Australia! I've been wanting to see this colony's size ever since you introduced them...also, the most abundant ant species would be Tetramorium

  • @soggymuffin01
    @soggymuffin01 Před 2 měsíci

    Cool to see other ants pulling the cotton from their water tube.
    My pavements have been doing the same alongside a little bit of sand

  • @quantrinh9824
    @quantrinh9824 Před 6 lety

    I live in Vietnam ,where is plenty of ant species . I think the most common ant species is Solenopsis geminata , also know as Fire Ants . They often found in delta areas like where i am living in ,Hanoi .These guy often found in ant hill , some hill can reach to massive size and they were made completely from SAND ! Fire Ants also know for a very good ant species at cooperate. They ussualy overwelm their rival colony like black crazy ant and Pheidole species . They even build up a colony in my house , and all floor become their forging area .
    Love to see more video about Bull ant ,thank Jordan !

  • @syreillesales
    @syreillesales Před 5 lety

    just started ankeeping and i just caught my first queen and its an argentine ant and i saw your vids and its really great tips

  • @ilikeants5032
    @ilikeants5032 Před 4 lety

    I love the room tours and the nest is ginormous

  • @thebenzo9793
    @thebenzo9793 Před 6 lety

    I'm from germany, saxony and the most common ant species is Lasius niger. They are everywhere. Under every stone, in almost every tree... just everywhere.
    A lot of german antkeepers don't like them because they are everywhere and they say this species is borring.
    But in my opinion this species is wonderful. They are perfecr for the start in the hobby. They are not too small, they are easy to hold and when they grow to a big colony they are so activ and exciting.
    Sorry for my english :D
    I realy like your Channel. You make very awesome videos.

  • @AntsMierenAvonturen
    @AntsMierenAvonturen Před 6 lety

    Thanks a amazing colony and formicarium! cant wait to see more!:)

  • @antsatlas4855
    @antsatlas4855 Před 6 lety

    Cool! I love the new nest Jordan;)

  • @jasonyi1232
    @jasonyi1232 Před 6 lety

    I'm from the Washington DC area and I have found Camponotus castaneus very common in my area. There is actually a nest of them right outside my house. I find them everywhere while searching for queens last season. I noticed that the ants took some curled up ants out of their nest one day and took them to what looked like a waste area. It was really cool to see them do that behavior, and oddly I have not seen them do it again. Maybe they were taking dormant workers to warm up as it was later in the year. Because they are larger than the average ant when my mom was looking for queens she often mistook them as a queen. This species is really abundant in my area, and is also one of my favorite species.

  • @sourlemon2155
    @sourlemon2155 Před 6 lety +1

    South Africa Rider ants!!!! They are like a army that moves in a straight line all day and crush anything in its path

  • @pr0ph1l37
    @pr0ph1l37 Před 6 lety

    Hi Jordan, I live in Aurora, Colorado (in the U.S. of course). The most common ant in my area are Tetramorium Sp. E. There is another ant that lives in my area called Pogonomyrmex barbatus. Which is my favorite ant species. They are a harvester ant species and have a nasty sting. That nasty sting I was given when I was younger made the red harvester ant my favorite. They look so cool with their big heads and funny looking beards. I capture a “queen” every year and I’m starting think I might be catching social parasites, which is kinda sad because I get my hopes up, and boom, dead queen in the time span of a month. But that will not stop my love for these ants and will not stop my ambition to catch an actual queen. Thanks Jordan. On a 2 heart streak on this channel. That’s awesome.

  • @joziants4403
    @joziants4403 Před 6 lety

    Great video as always!

  • @spamstars6866
    @spamstars6866 Před 6 lety

    One of the most common ant species where I live is the big headed ants (pheidole sp). I love their soldier’s huge and unique looking heads too. I live in Singapore where pheidole are extremely common and can be seen everywhere.
    Love your videos Jordon can’t wait for you to hit 50,000 subscribers

  • @wb8047
    @wb8047 Před 5 lety

    amazing video, so much to learn and so much to appreciate

  • @MyLivingWorldsAnts
    @MyLivingWorldsAnts Před 6 lety

    Wow... Just wow some awesome colonies, keep up awesome content

  • @isaiahburnley5538
    @isaiahburnley5538 Před 6 lety

    Love all your ants vids 😍

  • @sktravels4u
    @sktravels4u Před 6 lety

    Thank you for your documtary

  • @infinityowl4203
    @infinityowl4203 Před 4 lety +2

    this channel is like Baby Einstein for adults...... so chill.

    • @cchhii961
      @cchhii961 Před 4 lety

      Adults?? I'm 13 :0

    • @aidangm7419
      @aidangm7419 Před 3 lety

      Same. But I mean turning 14 this month

    • @sanguillotine
      @sanguillotine Před 6 měsíci

      @@cchhii961no you aren’t, you’re 17

  • @bugkeeper2002
    @bugkeeper2002 Před 6 lety

    im from california, the most abundant ant species i have seen is either argentines or tetramorium ( pavement ants) ive learned that Paratrechina longicornis like living in the eucalyptus trees right near my house and some are even living in my sink! I'VE also learned that tetramorium use the spaces and cracks in the pavement as "roads" to guide their highways. they also live under cinder blocks and garden ornaments in my front yard.

  • @frostyman349
    @frostyman349 Před 4 lety

    Wow such a big colony!!

  • @SampelMSM
    @SampelMSM Před 5 lety

    That is HUGE the ants must be happy

  • @Velppp
    @Velppp Před 6 lety

    - I have many Pheidol pallidula and lot of Crematogaster scutellaris in my garden
    - I live in the south of France.
    - I love to see during summer hundreds of Pheidol gathering around my cats's food waste, and cleaning perfectly all plates in minutes.
    And I spend so many time at watching scutellaris ant feeding with honeydew on the Bignonia bush "Campsis radicans" that climb at my bedroom window. I found that the honeydew is directly produced by the Bignonia, and with this, the plant pay mercenaries to protect itself againt leaf-cutter.
    Some times, I see many Crematogaster scutellaris on a part of the bush, and few hours later, many Crematogaster auberti take the place and start gathering the place ^^.. The ant war is everywhere !
    ps: thx a lot for your videos ! Keep that quality !

  • @adaumisasmr6620
    @adaumisasmr6620 Před 5 lety

    These are so common in So Cal, as well as Fire Ants. (we have the city come out and deal with them when Fire Ants invade). I had a highway of Argentine Ants on my backyard wall, I put a barrier of poison powder and now they are dead/gone. The swarm they produce is remarkably massive. Even in the office I work at, I once left toast in my trash can and got back the next day to find ants everywhere.

  • @antshongkong6591
    @antshongkong6591 Před 6 lety

    LOVE THESE VIDS!

  • @stvoodoo
    @stvoodoo Před 6 lety

    Camponantus ligniperdus, western Canada. One thing ive learned with the ants here is how they hibernate during such cold temperatures. I open my fridge to check on them weekly and every time it amazes me to see them slowly moving and fully alive. Thanx for sharing!

    • @TmanMoneymanISSUPREME
      @TmanMoneymanISSUPREME Před 5 měsíci

      They are known to be native to Europe, though on ant maps it says they are “Dubious” in parts of Canada and the USA, but I’m pretty sure they are not native or invasive to North America. I think your talking about Camponotus Herculeanus, or another reddish species

  • @Pides13
    @Pides13 Před 6 lety

    I am from Cyprus and Camponotus Sanctus is the most common species in my country.
    They are beautifully coloured species with major workers which can reach up to15mm in size with the queen reaching up to 16-18mm. The colony has to reach a certain number of workers before starting to produce majors. Very good climbers and aggressive. They feed on mostly insects and honey water. You can find them in Soil nests and often under stones.

  • @filobaci142
    @filobaci142 Před 6 lety

    I live in Italy and there are a lot of Messor barbarus, is so cool see lines of ants go to keep food.🐜🇮🇹🐜 Wow good documentary of Argentine ants.