Ant Reproduction Without Queen: Possible?

AI Thread Summary
Ants cannot reproduce without a queen, as worker ants lack the ability to produce eggs. Capturing a group of ants, regardless of their gender mix, will not lead to reproduction in isolation. Even if a queen is captured, simply placing ants in a composter will not effectively convert organic waste into ants. Ants are not efficient decomposers compared to other organisms like worms, and they struggle with breaking down complex plant materials. For effective composting, it is recommended to enhance the process by adding nitrogen-rich materials, maintaining moisture, and ensuring proper aeration. Other decomposers, such as pill bugs, are noted to be more effective in breaking down woody tissues. The discussion highlights the importance of understanding the roles of different organisms in composting and the limitations of using ants for this purpose.
Stephanus
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Dear PF Forum,
Can ants reproduce without their ant queen?
Supposed I trap some ants, perhaps tens to 1 hundred. And I keep them in a box, ventilated with some food - candy; chocolate; Will they reproduce, considering in 1 hundred ants, not all of them will be all males or all females. Or they need the ant queen?

Thank you very much.
 
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While there are ways that ant colonies can recover from the loss of a queen, that's not what you've got here. You've extracted some workers and isolated them. They won't have developing pupae or eggs, they won't have males (unless you were sure to capture some of them), they don't have a colony.
 
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Stephanus, you clearly have too much spare time on your hands :oldlaugh:
 
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phinds said:
Stephanus, you clearly have too much spare time on your hands :oldlaugh:
Come on. I'm trying to put some ants in my composter bin, see if they can multiply and eat all the organic material there to speed up the process.
 
No, that won't work. Even if I capture the ant queen. I just convert the organic waste to ants, and there will be more ants.
 
Stephanus said:
No, that won't work. Even if I capture the ant queen. I just convert the organic waste to ants, and there will be more ants.
That depends on your end-goal.

If what you are trying to accomplish is reduce/eliminate bulk, then no, you will have just as much.
If what you are trying to accomplish is produce compost for your garden while diverting it from a landfill, then you may be on to something.
 
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Stephanus said:
Come on. I'm trying to put some ants in my composter bin, see if they can multiply and eat all the organic material there to speed up the process.
Ha. Great idea. Then you will be overrun with ants. :smile:
 
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phinds said:
Ha. Great idea. Then you will be overrun with ants. :smile:
Read this Phinds!
Stephanus said:
No, that won't work. Even if I capture the ant queen. I just convert the organic waste to ants, and there will be more ants.
 
Stephanus said:
Come on. I'm trying to put some ants in my composter bin, see if they can multiply and eat all the organic material there to speed up the process.

Ants are pretty inefficient compared to other critters eg worms
 
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davenn said:
Ants are pretty inefficient compared to other critters eg worms
Oh. Thank you very much davenn. Good tips
 
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Composting.
Cellulose and lignin are complex carbohydrates that make up the conductive tissue in plants - fibers, vessel elements, and so on. Wood is made largely of these - so are plant stems, nut husks, etc.
Animals - unless they have gut symbionts like termites and horse and cows do - are not good at breaking down woody tissues. Bacteria and fungi are good. Ants are animals, not so good.

If you want to speed up composting you change the rate at which cellulose "eaters" do their job:
1. add nitrogenous wastes(garbage and spoiled foods) or even fertilizer to compost.
A new all sawdust pile when composted goes faster with water, fertilizer, and a handful of compost from another active older pile.
See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leaf_mold
2. keep it warm
3. keep it from drying out and add water once in a while, it needs to be very damp.
4. if you continually add new "fodder" then periodically churn up the compost to break up layers.
5. up to a point chopping the new material into small pieces speeds things up - more surface area.
- what I guess you hoped the ant addition would provide. Pogonomyrax (Harvester) ants will whack plants but they drag off the plant pieces to the colony.
 
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Pill bugs / sow bugs / cannonball bugs are very good at decomposing wood.
(Did you know that, being Crustaceans, they are more closely related to shrimp than they are to millipedes?)
 
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Thanks for the suggestions gentlemen. I'm learning composting now. I join gardener forum to learn "how to do" the composting.
And I use PhyicsForum for the science behind it :smile:
Thank you so much.
 

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