May 13th 2010, 19:40:05
Most ants will eat some kind of
sugar mixed with water (e.g., honey, sugar, maple syrup, etc.).
It is a good idea to add a little bit of powdered multivitamin
or mineral tablets to this mixture. Also, most (not all) ants
appreciate pieces of insects etc.
Species of leaf-cutter ants actually consume the fungi they grow
on the leaves they bring into the nest. They don't eat the
leaves, but they do need fresh leaves to grow the fungi on!
Harvester ants require seeds.
When it comes to feeding, I find the key element is not to add
the food to the terrarium but to have a foraging zone for the
ants. This will allow you to be able to clean the foraging zone
if mold occurs etc.
From page 219 of the Book, "Journey to the Ants" by Holldobler &
Wilson, the following is reported:
"To feed ants in the laboratory, we employ the Bhatkar diet
(named after it's inventor, Awinash Bhatkar), which is prepared
as follows:
1 egg
62 ml honey
1 gm vitamins
1 gm minerals and salts
5 gm agar
500 ml water
Dissolve the agar in 250 ml boiling water. Let it cool. With an
egg beater mix 250 ml water, honey, vitamins, minerals, and the
egg until smooth. Add to this mixture, stirring constantly,
the agar solution. Pour into petri dishes (0.5-1 cm deep) to
set. Store in the refrigerator. The recipe fills four 15-cm
diameter petri dishes, and is jellylike in consistency.
Most insectivorous ant species thrive on this diet when fed it
three times, weekly along with fragments of freshly killed
insects, such as mealworms (Tenebrio), fluffroaches (Nauphoeta),
and crickets, offered in small quantities. If the ants are also
predators, they do especially well when allowed access to bottles
containing fruit flies, preferably flightless mutants.
Alternatively, fruit-fly adults can be frozen and sprinkled onto
the foraging arenas for the ants to discover." --Holldobler and
Wilson
Diet and Nutrition Web page for Ants: http://boxcarhosting.com/...lication.php?clanID=TIE1a
Feeding: A varied diet is very important for the ants. A
monotonous diet will result in failure. It is also necessary to
feed the ants with very fresh food (every day). For hunting ant
species, mealworms, flies, and larvae and pupae of other ant
species. Even raw meat may be used as food.
It is recommended to keep one's own insect breedings to feed the
ants. You could, for example, put a piece of cheese rind into a
container filled with coffee grounds to lure flies. Once they have
laid their eggs on the rind, you can put it into a closed insect
box out of which flies and larvae for feeding can be taken
continuously. Mealworms (Tenebrio) are bred by putting mealworms
bought in a pet shop onto a mixture of bran and flour. On top of
it, you should put a piece of dry bread. The larvae gather in the
moist and crumpled cloth everything is covered with. Pupae should
be put into a separate breeding container (lest they are eaten by
the larvae) as well as the hatched beetles.
A nourishing diet can be mixed out of egg yolk, yeast, trypsin,
pepton, ovomaltine and pollen.
Diet mixture for ants:
Diet #1
125 g cane sugar
31 g pure natural honey
42 g soya flour
42 g dry egg-white
42 g baking yeast
10 g pepton
5 g ovomaltine
5 g trypsin
vitamins A + B 1,2,6,12
hens egg yolk
agar
water
~Mr Ant
sugar mixed with water (e.g., honey, sugar, maple syrup, etc.).
It is a good idea to add a little bit of powdered multivitamin
or mineral tablets to this mixture. Also, most (not all) ants
appreciate pieces of insects etc.
Species of leaf-cutter ants actually consume the fungi they grow
on the leaves they bring into the nest. They don't eat the
leaves, but they do need fresh leaves to grow the fungi on!
Harvester ants require seeds.
When it comes to feeding, I find the key element is not to add
the food to the terrarium but to have a foraging zone for the
ants. This will allow you to be able to clean the foraging zone
if mold occurs etc.
From page 219 of the Book, "Journey to the Ants" by Holldobler &
Wilson, the following is reported:
"To feed ants in the laboratory, we employ the Bhatkar diet
(named after it's inventor, Awinash Bhatkar), which is prepared
as follows:
1 egg
62 ml honey
1 gm vitamins
1 gm minerals and salts
5 gm agar
500 ml water
Dissolve the agar in 250 ml boiling water. Let it cool. With an
egg beater mix 250 ml water, honey, vitamins, minerals, and the
egg until smooth. Add to this mixture, stirring constantly,
the agar solution. Pour into petri dishes (0.5-1 cm deep) to
set. Store in the refrigerator. The recipe fills four 15-cm
diameter petri dishes, and is jellylike in consistency.
Most insectivorous ant species thrive on this diet when fed it
three times, weekly along with fragments of freshly killed
insects, such as mealworms (Tenebrio), fluffroaches (Nauphoeta),
and crickets, offered in small quantities. If the ants are also
predators, they do especially well when allowed access to bottles
containing fruit flies, preferably flightless mutants.
Alternatively, fruit-fly adults can be frozen and sprinkled onto
the foraging arenas for the ants to discover." --Holldobler and
Wilson
Diet and Nutrition Web page for Ants: http://boxcarhosting.com/...lication.php?clanID=TIE1a
Feeding: A varied diet is very important for the ants. A
monotonous diet will result in failure. It is also necessary to
feed the ants with very fresh food (every day). For hunting ant
species, mealworms, flies, and larvae and pupae of other ant
species. Even raw meat may be used as food.
It is recommended to keep one's own insect breedings to feed the
ants. You could, for example, put a piece of cheese rind into a
container filled with coffee grounds to lure flies. Once they have
laid their eggs on the rind, you can put it into a closed insect
box out of which flies and larvae for feeding can be taken
continuously. Mealworms (Tenebrio) are bred by putting mealworms
bought in a pet shop onto a mixture of bran and flour. On top of
it, you should put a piece of dry bread. The larvae gather in the
moist and crumpled cloth everything is covered with. Pupae should
be put into a separate breeding container (lest they are eaten by
the larvae) as well as the hatched beetles.
A nourishing diet can be mixed out of egg yolk, yeast, trypsin,
pepton, ovomaltine and pollen.
Diet mixture for ants:
Diet #1
125 g cane sugar
31 g pure natural honey
42 g soya flour
42 g dry egg-white
42 g baking yeast
10 g pepton
5 g ovomaltine
5 g trypsin
vitamins A + B 1,2,6,12
hens egg yolk
agar
water
~Mr Ant