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Imported Fire Ants in Tennessee |
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| Imported Fire Ant Biology |
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| 1 | winged males (distinguished from the females by their smaller heads); |
| 2 | red-brown (RIFA) or black or dark brown (BIFA and HIFA) winged females; |
| 3 | one or more queens (wingless, mated females); and |
| 4 | workers |
Worker ants are wingless, sterile females. They protect the queen by defending the nest from intruders, by feeding the queen only food that the workers or larvae have eaten first, and by moving the queen from danger. They also forage and care for the developing brood.
Newly Mated Queen
The winged forms, or reproductives, live in the mound until
their mating flight, which usually occurs in the late morning and afternoon
soon after a rainy period. Mating flights are most common in spring and
fall. Males die soon after mating, while the fertilized queen lands and
walks around to find a suitable nesting site, sheds her wings, and begins
digging a chamber in which to start a new colony. Sometimes, several queens
can be found within a single nesting site.
A newly-mated
queen lays about a dozen eggs. When they hatch 7 to 10 days later, the
larvae are fed by the queen. These larvae will develop into small worker
ants that will feed the queen and her subsequent offspring. Later on,
a queen fed by worker ants can lay from 800 to 1,000 eggs per day if
needed. Larvae develop in 6 to 10 days and then pupate. Adults emerge
9 to 15 days later. The average colony contains 100,000 to245,000 workers
and up to several hundred winged forms and queens. Queen ants can live
7 years or more, while worker ants generally live about 5 weeks, although
large workers can survive much longer.
In addition to hybrid imported fire ants, there are two
kinds of red imported fire ant colonies—the single
queen and multiple queen forms. Workers in single queen
colonies are territorial. Workers from multiple queen colonies
move freely from one mound to another, which has resulted in a dramatic increase
in the number of mounds per acre. Areas infested with single queen colonies
contain 40 to 150 mounds per acre (rarely more than 7 million ants per acre).
In areas with multiple queen colonies, there may be 200 or more mounds and
40 million ants per acre.
Mounds
Imported fire ants build mounds in almost any type of soil, but prefers open, sunny areas such as pastures, parks, lawns, meadows and cultivated fields. Mounds can reach 18 to 24 inches in height, depending on the type of soil. Often mounds are located in rotting logs and around stumps and trees. Colonies also can occur in or under buildings.
Colonies frequently migrate from one site to another. A queen needs only
half a dozen workers to start a new colony, and can build a new mound
several hundred feet away from their previous location almost overnight.
Flooding causes colonies to leave their mounds and float until they can
reach land to establish a new mound. Colonies also can migrate to indoor
locations.
Thermoregulation
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Foraging
| Experiment
Station, Extension Service, College of Vet Medicine, College
of Agriculture, Institute
of Agriculture |
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For more information contact Karen
Vail |
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