Discothyrea
Discothyrea testacea
Nuptial Flight Calendar
Flight months: Jun, Jul, Aug
Care Guide
Discothyrea testacea is one of the most cryptic ants available to the dedicated hobbyist, a minute subterranean predator that spends its entire life hidden within the leaf litter and soil of eastern North America. From the Gulf States northward to the Great Lakes, this ant exists almost entirely out of sight. Queens measure a mere 2.5 to 3 millimeters, with workers ranging from 1.8 to 2.3 millimeters, all dressed in a shining reddish‑brown carapace. Colony size peaks at around 100 individuals, and workers are monomorphic, lacking any physical castes. What makes this species genuinely remarkable is its dietary specialization: D. testacea is a raider of arthropod eggs, particularly those of spiders (Smith 1979). It hunts alone, seizing the minute eggs and carrying them back to the brood chamber, a behaviour that has earned it the nickname “egg thief” among the few myrmecologists who have studied it. Despite its small size, this ant offers a window into an extreme niche, making it a fascinating subject for those with the patience and expertise to cater to its demands.
The care difficulty is firmly in the expert realm. This is not an ant for beginners, nor for keepers who enjoy frequent, casual observation. D. testacea requires unwavering environmental control and a steady supply of very specific live food. Any lapse in humidity, temperature, or diet quality will rapidly cause colony decline. The keeper must be comfortable culturing micro‑prey such as springtails or flightless fruit flies for their eggs, and must accept that the colony will remain hidden for weeks on end. In return, the successful steward is rewarded by the gradual unveiling of a ghostly, secretive society that few have ever witnessed. It is a species that demands reverence for the miniature world and a meticulous daily routine.
Housing must faithfully recreate the warm, humid forest floor. A plaster, ytong, or fine‑grade soil nest with tiny internal chambers is ideal; the ants will reject large, open spaces. Maintain a steady temperature between 18°C and 26°C, with the sweet spot around 22–24°C. Sharp fluctuations are a major stressor. Humidity is even more critical: it must remain between 70% and 90% at all times. This is best achieved by keeping the substrate permanently moist through a water reservoir beneath the nest and by minimizing ventilation. The nest itself should be kept in utter darkness using a cover or a dark‑out box, as even brief light exposure will drive the ants deeper and disrupt foraging. A substrate of coconut coir mixed with fine sand or peat works well, holding moisture and allowing them to excavate naturalistic tunnels if you provide a deeper soil layer.
Diet is the greatest challenge and a non‑negotiable aspect of successful care. In the wild, D. testacea feeds primarily on the eggs of spiders and other small arthropods, a behaviour well documented by Smith (1979). In captivity, you must replicate this with a clean, regular supply of tiny, soft‑bodied protein. The most practical and ethical approach is to maintain healthy cultures of springtails (Collembola) and wingless fruit flies (Drosophila melanogaster). These cultures continuously produce eggs and minute larvae which the ants will seek out and harvest. Some advanced keepers also offer fresh spider egg cases collected from orb‑weavers or similar harmless spiders, but this requires careful sourcing. Do not rely on standard sugars; the colony may occasionally taste a micro‑droplet of honey water, but carbohydrate feeding is inessential and can quickly spoil the humid nest. Water should be delivered primarily through the moist substrate, with a very small, refillable water tube as a backup, kept scrupulously clean.
A mandatory hibernation is required for long‑term colony health. In their native range, winter soil temperatures drop reliably, and the ants have evolved to need this cold rest. From late autumn, gradually reduce the nest temperature until it stabilizes at around 12°C. This cool, dark dormancy should last for roughly three months. Without it, the queen will eventually cease laying, and workers will die prematurely, leading to colony collapse. As spring approaches, slowly warm the nest back to the active range, and the queen should resume egg production. The return to activity is a gentle, weeks‑long process — patience is everything.
When your D. testacea colony first arrives, create the calmest possible introduction to their new home. Unpack them directly into a fully prepared, pre‑humidified nest and close them away in darkness for at least 48 hours without any disturbance. On the third day, place a tiny pinch of springtails or a minuscule fragment of egg‑case near the nest entrance, being careful not to introduce too much food that could decay. It may take another day or two before the first workers cautiously emerge to forage. During this settling period, watch intently for warning signs: if workers’ gasters appear shriveled, the humidity is too low; if grey mould appears on uneaten food, ventilation or feeding portions need adjustment. Resist the temptation to check too often. With a stable environment and the right diet, the queen will gradually begin laying, and over many months you will watch a ghost‑like colony materialize, a rare prize that rewards the very finest ant‑keeping skills.























