@ MilitANT
On the contrary! I had a tetramorium Queen who never removed her wings and she successfully raised a colony before being killed by other ants. Some times Queens are interrupted after their mating flights and they forget to remove their wings.
If she lays then there's a strong chance she is mated. And she is absolutely huge from the looks of it.
Ok, if you believe so, it is certainly true (for other readers: this is sarcasm!).
I am so tired of always trying to give correct advice and explanations, only to see other users with little experience countering with a rare, exceptional instance. It is absolutely not by chance that I wrote:
“So she probably is not mated”.
I am a professional myrmecologist with about 45 years of experience with keeping and even breeding many species of ants over generations. I have checked thousands of gynes by dissectioning them and looking for the presence of sperm in their spermathecae. Dealate ones that were mated, or sometimes unmated, alate ones that usually were unmated and very rarely were mated. The by far most frequent instance is that alate gynes lack sperm in their spermathecae, hence are unmated and will not rear female progeny.
Meantime, after a couple of years being active in various forums, I have largely stopped giving advice in a number of frequent questions, exactly because of such “counterarguments” as yours. From now on I will also refrain from commenting on alate “queens” and their abilities to start a colony.
Go ahead keeping such ants and try to find out what will happen. Unfortunately it is another frustrating experience that most ant keepers then do
not report the failure of such “experiments”. As a consequence, such misleading statements as yours are the ones that accumulate in the forums and in the memory.
Good luck to 4mykids,
Earlant