Today I noticed numerous ant mounds in sandy/gravelly soil along the side of a gravel road north of Isabella.

They were low “mounds,” sunken in the middle where the entrance was, measuring about 3 to 6 inches across. I wasn’t able to observe any ants coming or going. I don’t recall ever seeing these before in this area. The remind me of the “sidewalk ant” mounds so common in the Twin Cities when I lived there. The nearest thing I could find in the generic ant information on the web were pyramid ants. They are common in southern US, but not so much up here, apparently.
Have others seen these types of mounds locally, and know the species responsible?
Steve Wilson
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Roger A Powell Department of Applied Ecology North Carolina State University PO Box 918, Ely, Minnesota 55731 tel. - 218-235-8808 https://cals.ncsu.edu/applied-ecology/people/rpowell-2/ Husk at leve mens du gør det. Husk at elske mens du tør det. Piet Hein
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Yes, using “mound” was a bit of a misnomer to describe these structures. They were more like a pancake with a sunken middle centered by a hole. So too gradual an incline for antlion. Do they even occur in the Arrowhead? I’ve not noticed them before.
Clinton Dexter-Nienhaus, a naturalist and bit of an ant hobbyist, weighed in with the following:
“Those mounds (and mounds similar) are made by ants in the genus Lasius! There are a number of species in our area, so without a specimen it would be hard to say who. But. If you see more like this, I would imagine the ants coming in and out are orange, and so probably one of four or so species.”
Steve
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Has anyone seen actual ant lion traps in this area? I couldn’t find whether they were native to here or not when I looked online. I haven’t seen them in the Isabella-Tower area, but neither has much in the way of the very fine-grained soils that Steve talks about.
Steve Wilson
From: elyfieldn...@googlegroups.com <elyfieldn...@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of Steve J Engel
Sent: Friday, June 16, 2023 10:42 AM
To: Roger Powell <rpo...@ncsu.edu>
Cc: elyfieldn...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: {Ely Field Naturalists} Ant Question
If it is an ant lion, I wonder how successful it might be. I typically see ant lion funnels in sand that is uniformly very fine grained, which makes it difficult to impossible for the victim to gain any purchase with its feet and climb out, especially as the ant lion continues to disturb the sloping surface from below. The sand in the photo is coarse and not uniform in size, which might make it easier to get out of there.
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Roger A Powell Department of Applied Ecology North Carolina State University PO Box 918, Ely, Minnesota 55731 tel. - 218-235-8808 https://cals.ncsu.edu/applied-ecology/people/rpowell-2/ Husk at leve mens du gør det. Husk at elske mens du tør det. Piet Hein
Roger,
I found the same two inconclusive descriptions of their range when I looked online. I asked Clinton Dexter-Nienhaus, and here is his reply:
“Ant lions do occur in the NE part of the state, but seemingly at very low densities. On iNaturalist, there is only 1 record of any ant lion species/genus for the entire NE Part of the state, as far south as Brainerd. But many more observations near the Twin Cities and of course south, as well as a few records from the prairies out in Western and NW MN!
I suspect there are not many folks looking for them. I have only seen adults in a couple of places, with many traps in the sandier parts of the state. I think, if you find lots of sand in the NE you should probably find them.
Just a hunch though!”
So it would seem this is a good puzzler for EFN folks to solve. When EFN hosts Ely’s first nature-themed scavenger hunt (Bill Tefft, are you listening?), that can be one of the items on the list.
Steve





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Here is Clinton Dexter-Nienhaus’ take:
“It would be interesting to see the ants going in and out. But. I believe this should be the beginnings of a Formica sp mound! Not all thatch ants (genus Formica) build mounds from plant tissues, some do dig in soils and start their mounds with a soil component (at least from what I have seen from the species around here)! If they were red, there are a couple of different species groups of red Formica ants so it would be hard to tell who without collecting them.”
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