Be prepared for your spider to get much bigger! From my guess of Hogna sp, they can get a 6 inch leg span.
Well anyway here is my list of ants (and for giggles spiders)
Ants:
2X Pogonomyrmex occidentalis 400 workers and a queen
2X Pogonomyrmex occidentalis 12 workers and a queen
1 F. neorufibarbis colony with 10 queens, 250-300 workers
2X Monomorium minimum 1 queen about 200 workers.
Pheidole sp. 1 queen 300 workers
Camponotus sp (black and red) 1 queen 50-75 workers.
Camponotus sp (orange) 1 queen ~15 workers.
L. neoniger 1 queen ~40 workers
L neoniger 1 queen ~200 workers
4X misc black formica colonies diff sp, 1-2 queens each up to 30 workers.
1. Solenopsis molesta 50 workers, many larvae, 1 queen.
1 Myrmica sp 2+ queens ~50 workers.
1 Dorymyrmex insanus 1 queen ~40 workers
1 Formica queen from yard, probably from a colony killed by neorufibarbis, probably not gonna lay.
Spiders:
1 Wolf, large, 1.5-2 inches in BODY length.
2 Baby wolfs, inch legspan total
6 Female black widow mimics, 1 male black widow mimics with 2 egg sacs containing about 100 eggs each.
1 Jumping spider about .75 lengspan-1 inch maybe.
3 Brown wolf spiders (much smaller sp) half an inch to an inch in legspan maybe, one has egg sac of about 100.
1 Interesting orangeish spider, maybe some sort of trapdoor or purseweb, haven't keyed it out.
1 "camel spider" inch in body length, must have a bit to grow as I know they get bigger than this! Very fat one at that
Beetle:
1 adult Tiger beetle I caught a few weeks back, eating nicely on crickets.
(sorry I don't know scientific names for my spiders/beetle) I'm not as far into them yet.
^ And thats just before the flights start and the true anting season begins.