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Temnothorax unifasciatus worker — under 3 mm, pale yellow or brown acorn ant from the Holarctic, live colony at ANTonTOP
Temnothorax unifasciatus Price range: 59,90 zł through 129,90 zł

Lasius flavus

Price range: 39,90 zł through 119,90 zł

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Description

Lasius flavus, the yellow meadow ant, is a gentle subterranean farmer with one of the longest-lived queens in the hobby, building a hidden colony of up to 30,000 workers. Start your yellow meadow ant colony of Lasius flavus with ANTonTOP.

Live arrival + 24h unboxing-video guarantee.
Free shipping across Europe over 1299 zł.
DHL / InPost / EMS · ships the EU & worldwide.

Intermediate · Q 6-9 mm / W 2-4 mm · Up to 30,000 workers · Winter rest at 5-10 °C for 4 months mandatory · Omnivore · Europe (Europe and northern Asia) · No sting, mild bite

Additional information

Behavior

Keeping difficulty

Origin

Ant size

Hibernation

Sting

No sting

Description

Lasius flavus – Yellow meadow ant

Origin Europe (Europe and northern Asia)
Difficulty Intermediate
Colony form Monogyne (1 queen)
Max workers Up to 30,000 workers
Queen 6-9 mm
Worker 2-4 mm
Soldier / major
Founding Claustral
Temperature Nest 16-22 °C / Arena 18-24 °C
Humidity Nest 60-75% / Arena 45-65%
Hibernation Winter rest at 5-10 °C for 4 months mandatory
Diet Omnivore
Sting / bite No sting, mild bite
Egg to first worker ~4-7 weeks
Queen lifespan ~18 years (max 22.5)
Nuptial flight July-September
Activity nocturnal/subterranean

Lasius flavus, the yellow meadow ant, is a gentle subterranean species with an extraordinarily long-lived queen, a worthwhile intermediate ant for a patient keeper who enjoys a slow, deep nest.


Why this species

This yellow meadow ant lives mostly underground, ranging across Europe and northern Asia, and its appeal is the quiet, long game. Founded by one claustral queen, the colony is famous for queen longevity, around 18 years on average and up to 22.5, so it can stay with a keeper for a very long time. It is mild and stingless, content to tend its brood and farm root aphids out of sight, with most of the action happening below the surface. It earns its Intermediate rating from the mandatory winter rest and its subterranean nature, and it is ideal for someone who values a low-drama, long-term colony.


Feeding

An omnivore that lives mostly out of sight, with workers farming root aphids underground for honeydew and feeding the brood on small insects. Keep a sugar source available at all times and offer protein two to three times a week, even though much of the feeding happens below ground.

Sugar water / honey water ★★★
Ant nectar / sugar jelly ★★★
Honey ★★★
Protein jelly ★★★
Crickets ★★★
Cockroaches (Dubia / Turkish) ★★★
Fruit flies (Drosophila) ★★★
Houseflies ★★★
Locusts ★★
Boiled egg yolk ★★
Mealworms
Superworms
Boiled lean chicken / shrimp / meat
Soft fruit (apple, pear, banana)
Dried insects
Soft seeds (poppy, sesame, chia)
Hard seeds (canary, millet, sunflower)

★★★ readily · ★★ moderately · ★ occasionally · ✗ not eaten


Housing & formicarium

Start this underground ant in a test tube, then move it to an aerated concrete or earth-style nest that lets it tunnel and stay covered as the colony grows. As a damp-loving subterranean species, it wants a moist nest with humidity held steady near the brood. A small foraging arena is enough, since it rarely forages in the open. Line the rim with fluon (PTFE), oil, or talc and water. ANTonTOP formicaria and starter kits suit this genus, with a humid covered nest and a compact arena.


Climate & wintering

This is a cool, damp-loving underground ant: nest at 16-22 °C and arena at 18-24 °C, with humidity at 60-75% in the nest and 45-65% in the arena. Heat one side gently to create a soft gradient. Hibernation is mandatory, a cool dormant rest at 5-10 °C for 4 months that this temperate species needs each year.


Growth forecast + what you receive

A slow, patient build, with worker development running about 8-10 weeks and the colony filling out over many seasons toward up to 30,000 workers. The pale workers spend most of their lives underground, so growth is felt more than seen. You receive a queen with workers and brood, ready for an earth-style or humid nest.


Did you know

  • Lasius flavus farms root-feeding aphids deep in its nest, milking them for honeydew, so a mature colony runs an entire underground livestock economy that the keeper rarely sees.
  • Out in meadows it raises long-lasting grassy mounds that can persist for decades and become small ecosystems of their own, a recognised feature of old undisturbed grassland.
  • Its queens are among the longest-lived insects on record, with documented lifespans pushing past two decades.
  • The pale yellow colour and reduced eyes reflect a life spent almost entirely below the surface.

Frequently asked questions

Is Lasius flavus good for beginners?

It is Intermediate, gentle and forgiving, but it needs a mandatory winter rest and patience for slow, hidden growth.

Does the yellow meadow ant need a winter rest?

Yes. A hibernation at 5-10 °C for 4 months is mandatory for this temperate species.

Does the yellow meadow ant sting or bite?

No sting, only a mild bite.

How big does a Lasius flavus colony get?

Up to 30,000 workers.

How large is the queen?

6-9 mm, with workers at 2-4 mm.

How fast does it grow?

Slowly. Worker development takes about 8-10 weeks, and the colony builds over many seasons.

What does it eat?

Sugar water, nectar or jelly, and insects like crickets and flies, though much feeding happens underground.

Will it arrive alive?

You receive a queen with workers and brood plus a heat or cool pack, shipped within 24 h with tracking.


Keeping & shipping essentials

Escape prevention. Coat the inner rim of every open arena with fluon (PTFE), or use talc-and-water or an oil barrier as a backup, and keep a tight, fine-mesh lid on top. Check the barrier regularly, since dust, condensation and feeding debris break a fluon line over time. Keep tubing connectors tight and seal any gaps in the nest.

Keeping reminders. Always offer fresh water and never let the nest dry out completely. Give carbohydrates continuously and protein a few times a week, and remove uneaten insect prey within 24 hours before it moulds. Keep the formicarium out of direct sunlight and away from constant vibration, which stresses a young colony. A water-filled test tube plugged with cotton makes an ideal spare incubator whenever you need one.

Before you buy – do not rehouse too early. Have a test-tube setup or a small formicarium with an outworld and a working barrier ready before your colony arrives. A founding colony grows slowly at first, which is normal. Moving a small colony into a large nest too soon invites mould, mites and stress, and the workers die off one by one. Keep the colony in its open test tube on the arena, plug the nest entrance with cotton, and open up the next chambers only once the colony fills roughly 10-15% of the space.

What we ship. Every colony ships with a live-arrival guarantee, backed by our 24h unboxing-video guarantee: if the queen does not arrive alive, we reship free. Parcels travel with DHL, InPost (PL) or EMS, with a heat or cold pack to suit the season, packed discreetly and securely. We ship across the EU and worldwide, with free shipping over the Europe threshold.

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