Tom masterfully reframes biological stasis as evolutionary efficiency, reminding us that in nature, human intervention is often the greatest threat to success. It is a poignant lesson in restraint for an era that frequently mistakes constant activity for progress.
Deep Dive
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Deep Dive
You Caught a Queen Ant… Don’t Stress HerHinzugefügt:
After the nuptual flight, you caught a queen. Maybe during a flight, maybe just wandering across a path. Either way, you got her home, set her up carefully in a test tube, and then you waited, and she did absolutely nothing. It's exactly what you should be seeing. And by the end of this, I want you to understand not just that it's normal, but why it's normal. what's actually happening inside that tube, what the next few weeks usually look like, and what things are generally worth worrying about compared to the things that only feel worrying when you're new.
To understand why your queen is so still, you need to understand what [music] she's just done. Not long ago, she was a winged elate inside an established colony, fed, protected, surrounded by workers. Then she flew.
She mated, [music] landed, removed her wings, found somewhere to hide, and now she is completely alone. No workers, no protection, [music] no outside help. And from this point on, everything she does is focused on one job. Starting a colony from nothing. That includes being very, very, very, very, very still. For most common UK species, including Glacius Niger, she's claustro, which means she raises her first workers entirely on her own internal reserves.
And that's the part a lot of beginners don't realize. She is not waiting for food. She is being the food. The wing muscles she no longer needs. The reserve she built up before the flight. That is what powers this stage. So when she sits there doing almost nothing, that isn't laziness. That's efficiency. Movement costs energy. Stillness saves it. And every bit of energy she doesn't waste is something she can put into brood instead.
A lot of the anxiety in founding comes from not knowing whether things are on schedule. So let's make this more concrete. For a species like lassius niger at normal room temperature, eggs often appear somewhere in the first 1 to 3 weeks. They are tidy like really tiny.
Little white ovals usually held together in a cluster often tucked under the queen or kept very close to her. So not seeing them on a quick glance does not automatically mean they aren't there.
After that those eggs develop into larae. Then the larae pupate and then eventually you get your first workers.
At room temperature, the full process from egg to first worker often lands somewhere around 6 to 10 weeks.
Sometimes quicker, sometimes quite a bit slower. And temperature is the big reason why. If the room is cooler, everything slows down. That's normal. It does not mean she's failing. It just means biology is moving more slowly. So if you are keeping a queen in a cooler British room and it feels like nothing is happening for weeks, don't immediately assume something is wrong.
slow can still be healthy. And when those first workers do finally appear, they often look a bit different. They are usually smaller, sometimes paler, sometimes a bit fragile looking. That's normal, too. These first workers, the nanetics, were raised under the most limited conditions the colony will ever experience.
This is really the heart of the whole video because what most people want to know is not just is she still, it's she.
And the annoying truth is that healthy founding usually looks very uneventful.
A healthy queen often spends long periods doing almost nothing obvious.
She may stay tucked into one area of the tube, usually near the cotton or at the far end. If there is brood, it'll often be clustered close to her or hidden partly under her body. None of this looks dramatic. That's the point.
A queen that is settled, conserving energy, occasionally adjusting position, maybe moving brood around now and then.
That can all be exactly what healthy founding looks like. There are also a few things that tend to scare beginners that usually are not a disaster. If she seems to have eaten some brood, that isn't automatically the end. Queens sometimes reabsorb eggs or early brood under stress or when conditions aren't quite right. One setback does not mean the whole attempt is doomed. If she hasn't moved much in days, that can still be normal. If you can't see eggs, that can still be normal, too. And if the brood pile seems to shift around from one check to the next, that's usually a good sign. She's responding to tiny differences in humidity or temperature that you can't even feel.
What is more concerning is when behavior becomes sustained repeated in total. If she is moving frantically for hours and never settling, that's different. If she repeatedly lays brood and repeatedly destroys every single clutch over a long period, that may mean the founding attempt isn't going to succeed. If there's significant mold spreading through the tube, especially in the humid areas, that needs attention. And if she shows absolutely no response at all over multiple checks and even a couple of taps on the test tube, then yes, you may need to consider that something has gone wrong. The easiest way to tell a very still queen from a dead one is simple. A living queen will usually respond somehow to a very gentle disturbance. A twitch of the antenna, a slight repositioning, something small, but something. If there is absolutely no response over multiple checks, then that becomes much more of a concern.
Your job during founding is minimal, but it isn't zero. There are a few things worth keeping an eye on, and most of them are very simple. The first is the water reservoir. That water should last a long time in a proper test tube setup.
So, you're not looking for constant change here. You just checking that the reservoir still exists. The cotton still looks properly moist and the tube hasn't obviously dried out. Some visible signs of moisture near the water side are useful, but don't panic if the tube isn't heavily misted or covered in condensation.
What matters is that the setup is still holding humidity properly, not that it looks dramatic. Temperature matters, too. For Lassius Niger, a stable room temperature is usually enough. You do not need to get clever with direct heating for a queen in [music] a tube.
In fact, putting heat directly underneath can dry things too aggressively and create more problems than it solves. Light is another big one. Keep the tube covered as much as you can. A dark cover, a card sleeve, or red film can all help reduce disturbance. Red coverings are often used because they tend to be less disturbing for many species while still letting you check in briefly. And that brings us to frequency. [music] Once a week is enough. That's the part most people struggle with because leaving her alone feels like you're not doing anything, but that's the job.
Every extra check, every extra burst of light, every unnecessary movement adds stress to an animal that is trying to found a colony on limited reserves. So, restraint really is the skill here.
Everything I've said so far applies to claustro queens. But not every species founds that way. Some are semic-clusteral, which means they do need to forage and feed during founding.
That is a big difference. A semic-clusteral queen won't just sit sealed away using only her own reserves.
She naturally expects to go out, find food, and come back. So, if you apply claustro care to a semic-clusteral queen, you can run into real problems.
This is why species matters so much. If you know what you've got, the care tends to become much clearer. If you don't know what you've got, identify that first before you become too confident about the setup or routine. Because one of the easiest ways to fail a queen is not poor intentions. It's using the right care for the wrong species.
And then eventually, after all that waiting, everything changes. You do a check and there's a worker. Usually small, often pale, which is called a callow. Sometimes looking slightly unsure of itself. This is your first nanitic. It always feels sudden, even though you've been waiting for it for weeks. And from that point on, the colony changes completely. The queen no longer has to do everything alone.
Workers start taking over brood care, nest maintenance, and eventually foraging. Her role becomes much more focused on laying eggs. And this is the point where feeding starts. Not before, now.
At this stage, small is the key. A tiny drop of sugar water is enough to start.
A tiny piece of insect for protein is enough as well. You are feeding a handful of tiny workers, not a mature colony. So, keep it simple, keep it controlled, and remove anything that's left too long. From this point on, the founding stage is basically behind you.
And usually, so is the hardest part. So, if your queen is sitting in a test tube right now, barely moving, apparently doing nothing, good. That stillness is not failure. It's conservation. It's efficiency. And for a claustro queen, it is exactly what this stage is supposed to look like. Your job now is very simple. Give her darkness. Give her stable humidity. Give her time. And then leave her alone. Because the hardest part of founding usually isn't building the setup. It's trusting it. And then that first worker finally appears.
You'll understand why all those quiet, anxious weeks were still part of this process. In the next video, I go into what changes once workers arrive, how to feed them, what healthy early colony growth looks like, and when it's actually time to think about upgrading the setup. Drop a comment below and let me know where you are right now. Have you just caught a queen? Are you waiting on eggs? Or have your first workers finally arrived? Make sure you like, subscribe, and all that good stuff.
Let's make it. Farewell.
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