Cataglyphis bicolor major worker — slender body and elongated legs desert ant from Sahara and Middle East, live colony at ANTonTOP
Cataglyphis bicolor Price range: 449,90 zł through 815,90 zł
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Cataglyphis iberica major worker — slender body and elongated legs desert ant from Sahara and Middle East, live colony at ANTonTOP
Cataglyphis iberica Price range: 249,90 zł through 389,90 zł

Cataglyphis hispanica

Price range: 649,90 zł through 1679,90 zł

No hibernation

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Free delivery over 999 PLN

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Description

Cataglyphis hispanica. A quality live ant colony for sale — monogyne colony with long-legged silver desert workers and a queen. Beginner-friendly, no hibernation, no sting.

A rewarding species to watch grow at home. Buy from ANTonTOP — live queen guarantee with 48 h photo proof, shipped from Poland in 1–5 days across the EU, worldwide on request.

Additional information

Behavior

Keeping difficulty

Origin

Ant size

Hibernation

Description

Cataglyphis hispanica

Common name
Origin Spain (Iberian Peninsula and North Africa)
Colony form Monogyne (1 queen)
Mature colony 500–2000 workers
Queen 12 mm
Worker 5–10 mm
Soldier (major)
Founding Claustral
Temperature Nest 24–32 °C / Arena 24–32 °C
Humidity Nest 40–65% / Arena 40–65%
Hibernation Light winter rest at 10–14 °C for 2 months
Habitat (wild) dry steppe
Difficulty Beginner
Stings or bites Mild bite, no sting

Why this species

Cataglyphis hispanica is a beginner cataglyphis from Iberian Peninsula and North Africa. Uniform reddish-orange body with darker brown gaster. An Iberian desert runner — easy keeping, calm temperament, and a vivid orange-red colour scheme. Cataglyphis — desert runners famous for path-integration navigation and explosive midday foraging speeds.


Housing

Start the founded queen in a sealed glass test tube setup until the colony reaches 15–20 workers. Then move to a small-to-medium formicarium of acrylic, ytong or plaster with a connected outworld. Dry sand substrate suits this desert genus — keep one humid corner only.


Temperature and humidity

Keep the nest at 24–32 °C during the active season, with one cooler shaded zone for the queen. Humidity in the nest chambers should sit around 40–65 %, with one wetter zone the colony can choose. Avoid direct sun and heavy hot spots — gentle ambient warmth from a low-wattage heat mat on one wall is ideal.


Feeding

Sugar source: small fresh-frozen and thawed insects 2–3 times per week (flightless fruit flies, small crickets). Sugar water 1–2 times per week. They process meals quickly thanks to their high metabolism.

Protein: fresh frozen and thawed insects — crickets, mealworms, fruit flies, cockroaches — 1–2 times per week. Increase frequency when brood is present.

Variety helps: rotate prey species so the colony gets a balanced amino-acid profile; never feed only mealworms.

Hydration: always offer plain water on a separate cotton, never let the test tube reservoir run dry.

Hygiene: remove leftover insects after 24 hours to prevent mould and mites.


Wintering

Winter rest is essential for this species. Light winter rest at 10–14 °C for 2 months. Drop temperature gradually over 2 weeks, keep the colony in a cool, dark, draft-free place, check humidity weekly, and resume normal feeding when temperatures rise again in spring. Skipping hibernation shortens queen life and disrupts brood cycles.


Escape prevention

Apply PTFE escape barrier on the top inner edge of the outworld — reapply every few months.

Use a tight lid with fine mesh; check it after every cleaning.

Inspect the formicarium silicone joints and tubing connectors monthly.

Keep the outworld dry on the inside edge where PTFE is applied — wet PTFE loses grip.


Important keeping reminders

Never disturb the queen during founding. Keep her in the dark, in a test tube, with minimal vibration.

Move the colony to a formicarium only when there are 15–20 workers and the test tube is genuinely full.

Always offer water on a separate cotton outside the food.

Quarantine any new insect feed for 24 hours before offering it to the colony.

Avoid synthetic fragrances, smoke and aerosols in the room with the colony.


Before you buy

This species is a good fit for first-time keepers. Even so, an ant colony is a living organism — your responsibility starts the moment it arrives. Read the care information here and in our care guides before placing the order, and contact us if anything is unclear.


What we ship

Your colony ships in a sealed glass test tube with a cotton water reservoir and a cotton plug — the same setup we use ourselves. It is packed in an insulated, padded shipping box. We hand-pick every colony, count workers and inspect the queen on the day of dispatch.


Did you know?

  • Described by Carlo Emery in 1906 from Spain — endemic to the Iberian peninsula and North Africa.
  • Found across central and southern Spain, Portugal, and parts of Morocco in dry steppe and matorral.
  • Recent work has shown the species reproduces by social hybridogenesis — queens mate with two distinct male lineages to produce workers vs new queens.
  • Workers forage individually rather than in trails — typical of all Cataglyphis.
  • Mediterranean climate makes this an excellent first Cataglyphis for keepers in southern Europe.

Frequently asked questions

How big can the colony grow?

monogyne, claustral founding, modest colonies of 500–2000 workers. Growth is steady but not explosive — give the colony 1–2 years to reach a few hundred workers.

Is this species safe around children and pets?

Workers do not sting and rarely bite if the formicarium is intact. As with any live insect, supervise children around the setup and keep it out of reach of curious pets.

Will the colony arrive alive?

Yes. We use insulated, padded boxes and ship only on weekdays when forecasted weather along the route is safe. If anything goes wrong in transit, contact us within 24 hours of delivery with photos.

Can I skip hibernation?

No. Hibernation is essential for this temperate species — queens need the cold rest to maintain long-term fertility and brood cycles.

Can I see this species in your video shorts?

We post regular video shorts of feeding sessions, brood close-ups and worker behaviour on our social channels.

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