A caution about Harvester Ants! After setting up what I had thought would be a long term art / science project, and while doing research on Red Harvester Ants, I have learned they
are related closely to wasps and bees. Being allergic to bees, I will now have to proceed differently, perhaps not working with ants at all.
I wish all of the ant farm packaging an
d pages had mentioned this relationship between Harvester Ants and bees. I was swarmed by yellow-jackets when I was 5, having over 500 stings at once. Bee stings are life-threatening to me, and now I have to suddenly view Harvester Ants in the same way.
Ughhh! I am surprised the close relationship is not required on ant farm packaging that is mainly marketed to children. Packages ARE marked that ants can sting, but the relationship to wasps and bees puts them in a different category.
The article I learned this from
is at
Desert USA . I will be doing some other specific art p
roject in the fu
ture. For the ants I currently have, I believe I will be putting them in the Uncle Milton's Light-up Gel Colony habitats I have. They do not need to be fed or watered in a gel environment, and there is much less chance of being bitten or stung. When I was a kid, I used to collect regular old black ants, but Red Harvester ants are the ones provided with
ants farms. I can, of course, use photographs for reference on ants and work that way. That would be different from my usual preference of working from life, but if I decide to proceed with studying ants, it is safer.
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