Photos / Sounds

What

Wood, Mound, and Field Ants (Genus Formica)

Observer

bibaker

Date

May 2, 2023 12:49 PM CDT

Description

There are several colors of ants in this hill. Most are black but some are red.

Photos / Sounds

What

Integra-group Field and Mound Ants (Complex Formica integra)

Observer

mettcollsuss

Date

August 2023

Photos / Sounds

What

Wood, Mound, and Field Ants (Genus Formica)

Observer

rdm-ncb

Date

August 6, 2023 05:55 PM EDT

Photos / Sounds

What

African Weaver Ant (Oecophylla longinoda)

Observer

ewphoto

Date

March 2019

Photos / Sounds

What

Citronella Ants (Subgenus Acanthomyops)

Observer

vantruan

Date

June 7, 2006 09:34 PM MDT

Description

Maybe?

Photos / Sounds

What

Integra-group Field and Mound Ants (Complex Formica integra)

Observer

sharonoutside

Date

August 1, 2022 03:22 PM MDT

Photos / Sounds

Observer

stevenw12339

Date

June 12, 2023 05:27 PM EDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Matebele Ant (Megaponera analis)

Observer

scott66263

Date

January 12, 2024 07:23 PM EAT

Photos / Sounds

What

Legionary Ants (Genus Neivamyrmex)

Observer

murilo4719

Date

March 4, 2024 11:07 PM -03

Photos / Sounds

What

Citronella Ants (Subgenus Acanthomyops)

Observer

nrabi

Date

September 16, 2023 05:18 PM EDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Allegheny Mound Ant (Formica exsectoides)

Observer

ken-potter

Date

July 23, 2020 08:26 AM EDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Nigricans-group Driver Ants (Complex Dorylus nigricans)

Observer

jiuai

Date

March 20, 2024 04:10 PM EAT

Description

Dorylus orientalis and Dorylus nigricans-group queen

Photos / Sounds

What

Citronella Ants (Subgenus Acanthomyops)

Observer

audis_bugs

Date

July 12, 2022 07:58 PM MDT

Description

What kind of ants are these?

Photos / Sounds

What

Mousy Pyramid Ant (Dorymyrmex grandulus)

Observer

jhiebert

Date

July 6, 2018 06:42 PM EDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Wide-legged Citronella Ant (Lasius latipes)

Observer

abbys_encounters

Date

August 8, 2023 07:26 PM EDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Black Legionary Ant (Neivamyrmex nigrescens)

Observer

scottpruitt68

Date

August 28, 2020 01:33 PM CDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Legionary Ants (Genus Neivamyrmex)

Observer

scottpruitt68

Date

August 28, 2020 01:31 PM CDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Integra-group Field and Mound Ants (Complex Formica integra)

Observer

ryangrow

Date

September 1, 2022 03:22 PM EDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Wood, Mound, and Field Ants (Genus Formica)

Observer

robmutch

Date

July 15, 2014 09:33 AM HST

Description

Swarming ants, Carpenter Mountain fire lookout, H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest, Willamette National Forest, Oregon, USA

Photos / Sounds

Observer

adamschneider

Date

August 11, 2021 01:17 PM PDT

Description

Found a bunch of ants "hilltopping" in the North Cascades. I didn't realize until I looked at my photos later that I'd actually caught some X-rated activity. The female (queen?) has a noticeably red head and thorax.

Photos / Sounds

Observer

chziemke

Date

August 9, 2022 01:22 PM MDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Wood, Mound, and Field Ants (Genus Formica)

Observer

zeledonia10

Date

July 29, 2019 12:49 PM MDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Integra-group Field and Mound Ants (Complex Formica integra)

Observer

chrisadlam

Date

July 14, 2019 10:26 AM PDT

Photos / Sounds

Observer

lbyrley

Date

July 28, 2021 12:38 PM PDT

Photos / Sounds

Observer

oceanf

Date

August 3, 2022 10:07 AM PDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Wood, Mound, and Field Ants (Genus Formica)

Observer

hwesta

Date

March 22, 2024 02:44 PM MDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Northern Crazy Ant (Nylanderia parvula)

Observer

mmccarthy98

Date

June 14, 2019 08:19 AM EDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Steel-blue Cricket-hunter Wasp (Chlorion aerarium)

Observer

joshklostermann

Date

July 25, 2021 12:49 PM EDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Green Comet Milkweed (Asclepias viridiflora)

Observer

michelle865dales

Date

July 5, 2019 12:04 PM UTC

Photos / Sounds

What

Green Comet Milkweed (Asclepias viridiflora)

Description

Growing on west-facing, full sun, potential degraded hill sand prairie. Seeds 7.5-8mm long, 5mm wide. Seedpods smooth and lightly pubescent, 9.2mm long, 2.2mm wide.

Photos / Sounds

What

Wood, Mound, and Field Ants (Genus Formica)

Observer

el_nutcase

Date

May 24, 2023 10:02 AM EDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Dakota Mound Ant (Formica dakotensis)

Observer

northmun

Date

July 4, 2019 01:02 PM MDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Legionary Ants (Genus Neivamyrmex)

Observer

bug_eric

Date

May 19, 2022 12:51 PM CDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Wood, Mound, and Field Ants (Genus Formica)

Observer

stercorariidae

Date

June 12, 2019 09:52 AM EDT

Photos / Sounds

Observer

jlhensel

Date

July 7, 2022 08:03 PM EDT

Place

Lewiston (Google, OSM)

Photos / Sounds

Observer

jok741

Date

June 26, 2020 02:59 PM UTC

Description

Queen

Photos / Sounds

What

Slave-raider Field Ants (Complex Formica sanguinea)

Observer

blazeclaw

Date

September 1, 2021 03:14 PM MDT

Description

I believe both color morphs are the same species.

Photos / Sounds

Observer

simono

Date

February 25, 2020 04:46 PM AWST

Description

Forages alone with its abdomen in the air.

Photos / Sounds

What

Furnace Ants (Genus Melophorus)

Observer

timrudman

Date

August 3, 2022 01:54 PM ACST

Photos / Sounds

Date

March 13, 2006 11:14 AM ACST

Photos / Sounds

Observer

weecorbie

Date

June 14, 2022 04:37 PM MDT

Photos / Sounds

Observer

tobiashays

Date

May 21, 2022 02:33 PM MDT

Description

Colony under stone in litter, in shady conifer Acer forested area. Adjacent rock had a Formica podzolica colony, though no intermixed of the species was observed. Second image shows dealate queen with a medium sized worker. No definitive brood was observed, though two workers were carrying small white objects that could have been eggs.
Identification is based on the presence of clavate setae on most of the dorsal surface including the petiole, presence of setae on the facial region, and lack of standing setae on the scapes and tibiae (excluding setal rows along flexor surface). I will add diagnostic images soon.
Interestingly, some of the largest workers have a few erect setae along the gular area.

Photos / Sounds

Observer

hannahtidae

Date

July 13, 2022 02:44 PM MDT

Description

copper colored ant

Photos / Sounds

What

Feathery Citronella Ant (Lasius plumopilosus)

Observer

nicholasparlmer

Date

September 21, 2023 06:21 PM EDT

Description

I found this queen yesterday as I was collecting some B. depillis queens. Important notes for this area are that there's an abundance of Cthonolasius in the area. L. claviger are very common in that open grassy field a few yards west of the location. The queen was measured with calipers to be 4.3-4.4mm long. First two pictures are of the queen last night while she was alive, she passed away overnight and the last pictures are of today closer up. If you'd like to inquire about more information about anything here feel free to contact me. Special thanks to @aprothero @mettcollsuss @amatty76 for helping me identify this.

Images taken with a Novatek Camera.

Photos / Sounds

What

Long-horned Amazon Ant (Polyergus longicornis)

Date

July 4, 2022 04:43 PM EDT

Description

So, this is a polyergus bilateral gynandromorph! ½ worker caste (red), ½ alate (black). The mandibles, eyes, single wing, and antennae are the more obvious caste traits reflected in each half of this individual. Found them shortly after leaving the colony possibly (I found one a few feet away).
See: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/124878696
& https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/124879042

Photos / Sounds

Observer

clurarit

Date

May 28, 2023 01:21 PM HKT

Description

crunch

Photos / Sounds

What

Big-headed Ants (Genus Pheidole)

Observer

myrmecophil

Date

August 19, 2023 05:56 AM +10

Photos / Sounds

What

Shaded Fuzzy Ant (Lasius aphidicola)

Observer

meghanlmcdevitt

Date

June 21, 2022 09:56 AM EDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Common Citronella Ant (Lasius claviger)

Observer

mmmmbugs

Date

January 15, 2023 01:51 PM EST

Description

By itself

Photos / Sounds

What

Chicatana Leafcutter Ant (Atta mexicana)

Observer

arthropodantics

Date

November 22, 2023 02:22 PM MST

Description

Consider me dumbfounded, but Atta mexicana are officially established in Santa Cruz Co., AZ. With all of the recent alate observations north of the border (including a few of my own) it has become certain that established populations of this species have pushed further north than Imuris, Sonora. This site had previously been believed to be the northernmost extent of the species circa ~2000, but within the last 25ish years it seems as though the higher elevation habitat north of Imuris has become habitable for this species. Whether or not that is due to climate change, an urban heat island effect in Nogales, or this species adapting to a cooler climate, I am not sure.

As much as I would love to, I cannot take all of the credit for this observation. @ameeds recently made me aware of a BugGuide post by entomologist Salvador Vitanza, where he thoroughly imaged and documented Atta mexicana workers at this exact locality in Nogales, AZ. I was so dumbfounded that within 2 days I was at the locality to verify for myself, and sure enough I found almost exactly what was detailed in the BugGuide Post.
https://bugguide.net/node/view/2306508

Once I confirmed that there were, in fact, Atta workers here, my next task was to locate the colony's "center", the large pile of waste fungus created by these ants above their nesting site. The "nest entrance" detailed by Salvador Vitanza was clearly just a foraging entrance; this species creates underground tunnels from their nest to more fruitful foraging areas - up to 150 meters in any given direction. However, due to the foraging entrance in question having a foraging trail over 100 meters long (BugGuide post says 140m, but I observed the trail fading out at around 105m - trail length likely varies day-by-day). This long trail most likely means that the colony's center was nearby to the foraging entrance. It is worth noting that all foraging activity was on the south side of the street - not a single worker was seen on the north side of the street.

I began my search by exploring the undeveloped land around the property. Unfortunately this area is quite steep, which made it somewhat difficult to survey, but upon searching thoroughly, all I was able to find was an additional foraging entrance underneath a tree located against a backyard wall of the property the original foraging entrance was in front of. I did peer over the wall, but was unable to see any obvious signs of Atta within the backyard of the property.

In the front yard of the property, very close to the original foraging entrance, I noticed 2 additional foraging entrances. One was located in a crack in the walkway , with workers foraging along the side of a concrete barrier for a garden. The second was located in the yard next to a large stone, and had a relatively large and pronounced entrance similar to the one located next to the street. From this entrance a short trail traveled to a Juniper tree, where workers were thoroughly removing plant material and bringing it inside. To see Atta harvesting Juniper so enthusiastically was astonishing to me - I never expected conifers to be a potential food item to Atta.

Given that all four of the foraging entrances I found were centered around this property, and no additional foraging entrances were found away from the property, I suspect the colony's nest is located on the property. I have included a map (last image) of the four foraging entrances and the location of the main long trail.

As a last note on this colony, I do suspect that it is a mature colony. Given the long foraging trails, wide array of plant materials being accepted, and presence of alates in the area, it is likely this colony has been in the area for several years now, and has had the opportunity to spread offspring to other parts of Nogales.

After thoroughly documenting this Atta colony, I explored the rest of the street and a bit of the surrounding area to search for more colonies, but could not find any. I definitely do not expect that this is the only colony in Nogales, AZ, but I was unable to find any additional signs of the species in my limited search. More extensive and widespread searching will definitely be required to find additional signs of this species in Nogales, AZ.

The last note has to do with the male alates found in this observation: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/179394123
Given that Green Valley is around 35 miles north of Nogales - almost the same distance between Imuris and Nogales, it seems there are only 2 possible explanations. Either those male alates hitchhiked on a truck from Nogales to Green Valley (not impossible considering I-19), or this species extends much further north into AZ than anyone expected. The latter has some merit - previously the higher elevation environment around Nogales was the main barrier preventing Atta from spreading northwards. With this habitat now suitable, I believe there is effectively nothing but time preventing this species from spreading even further north. This may seem like a long-shot, but I suspect that if this population in Nogales is able to persist, we will be seeing Atta in Tucson in the next 30 years.

Photos / Sounds

What

Mediterranean Acrobat Ant (Crematogaster scutellaris)

Observer

alyssa_sandford

Date

September 6, 2023 10:14 AM EDT

Description

Received a shipment from Portugal at work and these were inside the shipping container. Wasn’t sure if they were harmless or not

Photos / Sounds

What

Timber Rattlesnake (Crotalus horridus)

Observer

odddave

Date

July 2021

Photos / Sounds

What

Phoretica-group Thief Ants (Complex Solenopsis phoretica)

Observer

froggy143

Date

August 21, 2023 09:37 PM MST

Description

A single dealate queen was found in a small wash, probably a straggler from a daytime/morning flight. It appears to be the same species as the first phoretica queen found in Arizona, but it is difficult to tell without proper specimen photos for both of them, as a lot of specific features seem to be very dependent on the angle. There are some minor (although probably not notable) differences. Specifically the hair length on the head, mesoscutellar disc, and gaster (maybe). Possibly also the antennal scape length.

Didn't believe my eyes when I first saw it, I never expected that they would actually go this far north. This opens up their range a whole lot, although I do think that they'd still be more common in the south.

Not associated with any other ants, but hyatti, xerophila, and micula are the most common (or at least most conspicuous) Pheidole species in the area. P. rhea may also be present, but I haven't seen them here yet.

Photos / Sounds

What

Dakota Mound Ant (Formica dakotensis)

Observer

tobiashays

Date

November 2021

Place

Utah, US (Google, OSM)

Description

Dealate queen found under fallen poulus tremuloides log with large thatched mound. Formica obscuripes workers were found inside the log, in addition to a sizable colony of Formicoxenus hirticornis.

Photos / Sounds

What

Myrmicine Ants (Subfamily Myrmicinae)

Observer

herrszur1

Date

August 17, 2023 10:47 AM EDT

Photos / Sounds

Observer

inczi89

Date

August 9, 2023 09:09 AM CEST

Photos / Sounds

Observer

ita1

Date

April 2020

Photos / Sounds

What

Rufescens-breviceps-group Amazon Ants (Complex Polyergus rufescens)

Observer

blanca_depaz

Date

July 2, 2023 11:56 AM CST

Photos / Sounds

Observer

francesco_001

Date

July 19, 2023 04:33 PM CEST

Photos / Sounds

What

Difficilis-group Field Ants (Complex Formica difficilis)

Observer

srjohnson

Date

July 2, 2018 09:20 AM PDT

Description

red ant of unknown density on sand prairie not observed in 2019

Photos / Sounds

Observer

reiner

Date

August 16, 2022 12:11 PM AEST

Photos / Sounds

What

Tyson's Big-headed Ant (Pheidole tysoni)

Observer

scientificsnail

Date

June 26, 2023 04:20 PM CDT

Description

Observed underneath potted plants on outdoor patio

Photos / Sounds

What

Topoff's Amazon Ant (Polyergus topoffi)

Observer

froggy143

Date

April 13, 2023 10:55 AM MST

Description

This colony was pretty small, probably only about 20 or so Polyergus workers, and no brood. Probably a first year colony.

With Formica gnava hosts.

Photos / Sounds

What

Mousy Pyramid Ant (Dorymyrmex grandulus)

Observer

krdarc28

Date

July 2023

Photos / Sounds

What

Mousy Pyramid Ant (Dorymyrmex grandulus)

Observer

amatty76

Date

June 2023

Photos / Sounds

Observer

cjhoward1992

Date

June 20, 2023 08:00 AM CST

Description

Small colony (~20 individuals) including dealate queen in partially-buried rotting log at the base of a small tree a few meters off a busy hiking path.

Photos / Sounds

Observer

juliocchaul

Date

August 20, 2014 02:54 PM -03

Description

Undescribed species, found in the leaf litter/soil layer by the winkler extractor method (without killing solution, collecting the animals alive)

Photos / Sounds

Observer

bonpradhan

Date

May 29, 2023 08:17 PM IST

Photos / Sounds

Observer

ashirwad

Date

June 10, 2023 11:57 PM IST

Photos / Sounds

What

Black Driver Ant (Dorylus nigricans)

Observer

andreaudzungwa

Date

October 22, 2021 08:27 AM +03

Photos / Sounds

What

Legionary Ants (Genus Neivamyrmex)

Observer

liraley

Date

March 25, 2023 02:25 PM CDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Ferruginous Carpenter Ant (Camponotus chromaiodes)

Observer

krdarc28

Date

May 2023

Photos / Sounds

What

Legionary Ants (Genus Neivamyrmex)

Observer

hemiptamantis

Date

May 13, 2023 06:51 AM CDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Mary's Odorous Ant (Dolichoderus mariae)

Observer

jbofvt

Date

September 7, 2019 04:18 PM UTC