As of Friday, November 4th, 2011 I am a proud owner of a bicolor Atta cephalotes species. The reason why they are a bicolor is because they have an unusual color pattern consisting of an orange body with black legs and a black thorax. I got them from a personal supplier in Germany and I'm quite excited to attempt this species. For all you out there who don't know me, I'm a 22 year old guy from Canada and I love ants. They've been my passion since I could walk. I currently keep a wide variety of different species, some foreign some local all with proper permissions. If this colony succeeds and grows I will continue to post in this log.
For starters, I went to an arts and crafts store and purchased some acrylic containers which you'll see below, as well as some clear plastic tubing and of course some coco-fibre substrate. PM me for dimensions of the tubes and containers.
I (pressed for time) used a lighter and melted holes into the acrylic containers and when they were soft enough I pushed the tubing through. By keeping the setup relatively small I can easily maintain the humidity and the heat as well as giving the ants space to forage and dump their waste. The setup is made out of three different sized containers. The smallest one is the garbage/waste disposal. The one beside it is the largest and it houses the colony. The next one is the medium sized container which will be the foraging area. Once the ants outgrow this setup I will carefully move them to a bigger setup similar to the one they're in now.
I then boiled water and put in a third of the coco-fiber. Whilst it was disassembling, I stirred it slowly. By boiling the coco-fiber one kills off any harmful mites/eggs, springtail eggs and bacteria that may kill the ants/fungus. I let it boil for a good 10 minutes, then sit for another 15 minutes. I then de-juiced it (while still hot) of the majority of its water. This way the heat and humidity of the substrate will mimic the natural rainforest substrate that these ants sometimes live in (otherwise its natural clay). I also made tiny holes at the tops of each containers. This will release the carbon emitted by the fungus, but keep the humidity in. The walls of the containers are humid and warm.
When I introduced the ants to their set up, I noticed that the fungus was quite deteriorated. From a span of 24 hours I noticed a very big difference as it has become whiter and healthier looking. I placed in half of a raisin for them and they happily have been eating it all day, as well as I noticed they were seemingly regurgitating it up as well to the fungus. I could be wrong, but if I'm correct then that's awesome!
Here are some pictures of the colony and the setup and materials.
Enjoy!





