![]() ![]() When we were in Florida we were amazed to learn about a then new pest which has invaded the southern United States. The fire ant is everywhere, especially in Florida, and it's a tiny but dangerous insect. Naturally, we had to investigate what would happen if we did disturb a mound. We carefully stepped onto one, and then very quickly took our feet away. The reaction was instantaneous. Tiny fire ants by the thousands came boiling out of cracks in the dirt, and within seconds the surface of the mound was covered in ants. Fire ants are active and aggressive, swarming over anyone or anything that disturbs their nest, whether it's animals, birds, livestock, pets, or people. An accidental encounter with a fire ant nest could leave you with burning pain, followed by tiny, itching pustules, and sometimes even more severe reactions including anaphylactic shock . These ants will swarm over anything that threatens their mound or that looks like food, whether it be old people, crawling babies, injured birds, bedridden hospital patients, or you just out walking. Fire ants individually are hard to identify because they look much like ordinary ants. They are a few millimetres long and reddish brown to black in color. Fire ants in a colony are probably most easily distinguished by their aggressive behavior and characteristic mound-shaped nest. Their nests have no obvious openings, but just under the surface are many tunnels, allowing thousands of ants to emerge in just a few seconds. Fire ants don't always live in soil; any dark, protected site with moisture and a supply of food will do. Fire ants will nest in rotten logs, walls of buildings, under sidewalks and roads, in automobiles, and even in dried cow manure. In rural areas, fire ants are having a major impact on ground-nesting animals, including insects, reptiles, birds and mammals. In some areas, fire ants have completely eliminated some species from the ecosystem. The average fire ant colony contains 100,000 to 500,000 workers, and up to several hundred winged ants. Most mounds contain only one egg laying queen, however multiple queen colonies are known to occur in some parts of the southern U.S. states. The mound of a new colony is not noticeable until a few months after a new queen begins laying eggs. The below-ground portion of a fire ant mound is a complex of tunnels and chambers that may extend a metre underground. The upper portion of the mound, above ground, can reach a height of 30 to 50 centimetres, but in sandy soils the mounds are very low, sometimes evident only by the colour of the soil. Mounds we observed in Florida were often almost impossible to see until you stepped on them ... a definite hazard if you were to stop walking while standing on one! Fire ant colonies have been found inside automobiles, trucks and recreation vehicles Traffic accidents have been caused by fire ants stinging the drivers of automobiles. Victims of highway accidents can be attacked by fire ants if they are thrown from their vehicles. Damage estimates in the U.S. range from millions to billions of dollars annually. In Texas alone, it is estimated that fire ants cost the state $300 million annually. The beef cattle industry suffers losses estimated at $67 million per year. Hundreds of millions of dollars are spent annually for control of the fire ant. |