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Home :: Directory of Florida Insects : Ants in Florida
FLORIDA ANTS
Your source for information on Ants
Among the most prevalent of household pests, ants can be a nuisance for any Florida home or business owner. Ants will infest almost any structure, excluding those with extreme temperatures, where they can find food and water. Leave a crumb of food or a juice spill unattended and you are liable to wake up to find not just one ant, but many, many ants; long trails of ants busily moving back and forth around the food site and the surrounding areas. Their small size makes them very difficult to keep outside as they are constantly foraging for food. When ants find food, they lay down a chemical trail, called a pheromone, so that other ants can find their way from the nest to the food source.

There are many different species of ants in Florida, and these pests range from the tiny, essentially harmless Ghost ant to the ferocious and prolific Fire ant that deliver a bite that literally feels like you’ve touched fire. Ant mounds can damage lawns and landscaping and contaminate food, food preparation areas, and invade pet food bowls when they make their way into your home or business. They may be small, but they make up for their size in numbers; if you spot one ant, be certain there are thousands, even hundreds of thousands, more where that one came from.

Ants belong to the insect order Hymenoptera and are close relatives of bees and wasps. They have three body parts: the head, thorax, and abdomen. Ants undergo complete metamorphosis, passing through egg, larval, pupal, and adult stages. They are social insects, with specific duties divided among different types, or castes, of adult individuals. Queens and males are reproductives, and workers are sterile wingless females.

Winged ant reproductives, called alates or swarmers, leave the nest in large numbers in warm weather to mate and establish new colonies. They are often mistaken for termites that are similar in appearance and also exhibit this behavior. The way to tell them apart is by appearance, since the ant’s body is thin and constricted, whereas the termites body is
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Floridabugs.com Acrobat Ants Acrobat
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Floridabugs.com Argentine Ants Argentine
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Floridabugs.com Big Headed Ants Big Headed
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Floridabugs.com Caribbean Crazy Ants Caribbean Crazy
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Floridabugs.com Carpenter Ants Carpenter
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Floridabugs.com Compact Carpenter Ants Compact Carpenter Ants
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Floridabugs.com Crazy Ants Crazy
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Floridabugs.com Elongate Twig Ants Elongate Twig
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Floridabugs.com Fire Ants Fire
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Floridabugs.com Ghost Ants Ghost
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Floridabugs.com Odorous House Ants Odorous House
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Floridabugs.com Pavement Ants Pavement
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Floridabugs.com Pharaoh Ants Pharaoh
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Floridabugs.com Pyramid Ants Pyramid
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Floridabugs.com Rover Ants Rover
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Floridabugs.com Theif Ants Theif
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Floridabugs.com White Footed Ants White Footed
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straight-sided. Ants also have two pairs of long narrow wings that are firmly attached; the termite wings, which are similar in appearance, break off easily. If termite swarmers have been crawling, their broken wings litter the swarm area (which is also a good indicator of termite infestation, especially if found indoors). Ants have elbowed antennae, while termites have straight, beaded antennae.

The queen is larger than the others and conducts the reproductive duties of the colony. Sterile female workers gather food, feed larvae, build tunnels and defend the colony. Males are few in number as their sole purpose is to mate with the queen. Ants usually nest in soil but can also be found around buildings or outdoors in warm, moist, protected areas that are in close proximity to food sources, such as trees or plants.

Some species, such as the Pharaoh ant, prefer to nest indoors, especially during winter months. Others, such as the Argentine ant and the Big-headed ant, build multiple sub-colonies that are linked to form one large “super colony” which consists of multiple queens and can stretch out over a considerable distance. Fire ant mounds are often numerous and may contain multiple queens and 500,000 or more individual ants. Others, such as the Elongate Twig ant, have small, single-queen colonies in which only a few individuals are seen.

Pyramid ants and Pavement ants deposit soil in a circular crater to build their nests, with pavement ant leaving unsightly mounds on sidewalks, driveways, etc. Indoors, Carpenter ants and Compact Carpenter ants tend to nest in wood, using their strong mandibles, or jaws, to chew smooth galleries and tunnels into moisture-softened wood, increasing the nest size for their ever-expanding colonies.

Food preferences vary among ant species, but almost all ants are attracted to sweets. Honeydew, the sweet excretion of aphids and scale is highly favored by many ant species. Some, such as Argentine, Ghost, and White-footed ants actually tend or “farm” these insects, protecting them on the plant they eat and driving off any predators or parasites in order to secure a constant honeydew supply. This also increases damage from these pests. Thief ants are so named because of their habit of stealing food and larvae from other ant colonies. Ants can lift 20 times their own body weight, and large numbers of ants can often be seen carrying a dead insect or other food source back to the colony.

Other ants exhibit interesting methods of defense. Acrobat ants emit a foul odor when bothered, as do Odorous house ants. Crazy ants, Caribbean crazy ants and Rover ants display fast, erratic movements when bothered. The most aggressive ant species, the Fire ant use their large numbers and painful, stinging bite to ward off intruders, and will rush out of their mounds en masse to attack anything that disturbs them, regardless of size.

Although they can be a nuisance indoors and out, ants are fascinating insects that have many important functions in the ecosystem, such as feeding on other pests (caterpillars, termites, etc) and contributing to the natural decomposition of dead animals.

Do you live in Florida and think ants may be invading your home or business? Floridabugs.com offers specifically designed pest control treatments to regulate and eliminate these pests! Floridabugs.com - the finest in Florida pest control.
 
 
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