Everybody likes a good swarm and ants are master
swarmers. I believe this species is
Acanthomyops interjectus, AKA Larger Yellow Ant, one of several that produces a
lemony fragrance. They nest behind the
brick wall of our cellar and release thousands of winged queens around this
time every year. Usually the swarm takes
wing in the basement, but this year’s warm weather may have altered their
pattern to an outside departure.
Workers are a yellow or copper color. Other similar species share this appearance
and identification comes down to things such as eye size, hair placement and
body size. I hope I was looking at the
right things as I worked my way through the ant key.
Winged females stage beneath rocks and other cover or in
shallow subterranean chambers. When it
comes time to leave the nest, the workers rapidly open passageways and shoo the
fliers out of the nest.
The workers provide some protection during the exodus, but I
think their primary function if to persuade the unfertilized Queens
to get out and fly. Workers are quite
apt to give a laggard Queen a little bite of encouragement.
Once the Queens get moving, the action proceeds at a frantic
pace. The goal is to become airborne,
mate and settle down somewhere to start a new colony.
The way they climb over one another, it’s a wonder any of
them ever take off. The literature
identifies late summer as the breeding time for these ants. Early spring swarms are described, but no
winged males are reported. I know that
in all the years I’ve been watching this colony, I’ve never seen a spring time
male. So I’m puzzled as to what happens
to all of these departing Queens if there are
no males out there waiting.
After successfully mating, the Queen will shed her
wings. With no males in the vicinity,
there could be no mating, but when the swarming activity began to reach its
end, I noticed several wingless queens.
Most were wandering the ground in an apparent search for a secluded
spot. A few stuck with their winged
colony members. These may have
disappeared back into the protective chambers with the Queens
that didn’t make it into the air. This
swarm is in its fourth day with activity beginning about a half hour before
sundown and ending about 20 minutes later.
The swarm suddenly erupts from the ground and at some silent signal, all
the ants that haven’t flown are suddenly sucked back into their tunnels.
Not all of the hopeful Queens
survive the flight. Water is a death
trap. I frequently find winged Queen
ants floating in the Water
Garden . When the flight originates only a few feet
away, the number of floating ants really adds up.
The bounty isn’t wasted.
Just about everything likes to eat Queen ants. Frogs cleaned up most of the swimming
ants. Water Striders also took advantage
of the glut of food. Apparently mating
doesn’t interfere with eating, at least for the female.