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More
than 65 years ago, the red imported fire ant, Solenopsis invicta Buren,
was accidentally brought into Mobile, Alabama from South America. It
now infests more than 275 million acres comprising most of nine southeastern
states and Puerto Rico with small infestations in Tennessee, Oklahoma,
New Mexico and California. Another species, the black imported fire ant, Solenopsis
richteri Forel, was also introduced, but the range of this species
remains limited to northeastern Mississippi, northwestern Alabama and
southern Tennessee. A large population of hybrid fire ants (S. richteri x S.
invicta) exist in a band between the two parent species and can
be found in southeastern Tennessee, northwestern Georgia, northern Alabama,
and northern Mississippi. Fire ants can travel long distances when newly-mated
queens land on cars, trucks or trains or when winged forms are carried
by the wind. Shipments of nursery stock or soil from an infested area
may relocate entire colonies or nests.
 
 
Why
did eradication programs fail?
Attempts
in the late 60's and early 70's at eradicating the red imported fire
ant were not successful. The pesticides used, although effective, were
no match against a species capable of re-invading previously treated
areas. The reasons for failure are debatable, but it is now known that
eradication is hindered by three obstacles: biological, economic, and
pesticide treatment.
Biological
obstacles to eradication:
A |
The
ants infest such an extensive area that a single treatment
would take years and massive resources to apply. Fire ants
have a high reproductive rate and disperse easily. Thousands
of reproductive females are produced per colony, and the mated
females begin a colony wherever they land. |
B |
Queens
can fly up to a mile on their own or further when assisted by
favorable winds. The ants eliminate competing insects and then
rapidly overwhelm an area. Whole colonies can move, and in the
multiple queen form, the colonies can split into many new colonies. |
| C |
The
queen is protected from many poison baits, because she is fed
only food eaten first by workers and larvae. If a poison works
too rapidly, the worker is killed before the poison is passed
to the queen. |
| D |
Finally,
worker ants from well-fed colonies may not forage on a bait product,
or a bait may not be as attractive as some abundant natural food. |
Economic,
regulatory and environmental obstacles to eradication:
A |
The
best way to treat large areas (hundreds of acres) is by an
aerial application of bait. However, not all areas can be treated
because of label restrictions and application limitations. |
B |
Even
with a bait product, it is not feasible to treat the entire infested
area or even a large part of a single state, and untreated areas
are sources for reinfestation. |
| C |
The
larger the treatment area the more slowly reinfestation occurs. |
| D |
If
periodic treatments are discontinued, the area may become more
infested than it originally was within a year or two because
treatments may have eliminated competing ant species. |
Pesticidal
obstacles to eradication: Pesticide
treatments are expensive and time-consuming, and there are only
three basic approaches.
A |
Surface
Treatment using a residual contact poison. This
approach is the least environmentally sound because the treated
surface remains toxic for a long time. The ants may survive
by foraging underground. |
B |
Individual
Mound Treatment, which involves the application of
a large volume of pesticide to reach the queen. However, it
is nearly impossible to locate all of the colonies in an area,
difficult to manipulate large volumes of liquid, and treatment
is more expensive and time-consuming. Colonies not eliminated
may move or split into several colonies. |
| C |
Bait
Treatment, which uses some sort of attractive substance
the ants like to eat. Unfortunately, baits are not always consumed,
and the bait’s attractiveness is short-lived. The bait
must be slow-acting and effective over a range of doses, since
the dose the ants get cannot be controlled. Baits may also
be attractive to and kill some native ant species that compete
with fire ants. |
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