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RI, MA EHS Pest Control Blog

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Ants Detect Enemies Scent

30 May 2012

Posted by Joseph Coupal

Ants Remember Their Enemy's Scent

Ant colonies - one of nature's most ancient and efficient societies - are able to form a "collective memory" of their enemies, say scientists.

When one ant fights with an intruder from another colony it retains that enemy's odor, passing it on to the rest of the colony. This enables any of its nest-mates to identify an ant from the offending colony.

The findings are reported in the journal Naturwissenschaften.

For many ant species, chemicals are key to functioning as a society. Insects identify their nest-mates by the specific "chemical signature" that coats the body of every member of that nest.

The insects are also able to sniff out any intruder that might be attempting to invade.

This study, carried out by a team from the University of Melbourne in Australia, set out to discover if ants were able to retain memories of the odors they encounter.

The researchers studied the tropical weaver ant (Oecophylla smaragdina), which builds is home in trees; one nest can contain up to 500,000 workers.

The team set up a "familiarization test" to allow ants from one nest to encounter intruders from another.

Over a series of trials, they placed an ant from a "focal nest" into a tiny observation arena with an ant from another nest.

After 15 of these familiarizing face-offs, the team set up a fake ant invasion. They placed 20 worker ants from the now "familiar" nest on or near the focal nest.

"These intruders were typically attacked by the resident workers," the researchers reported in their paper.

George Williams,
General Manager - Staff Entomologist

Pest Control, RI, Pest Control, MA 

Cool Ant Facts

09 Apr 2012

Posted by Joseph Coupal

Did you know that an ant's abdomen contains two stomachs?! One stomach holds food for itself while the other one contains food to be shared with other ants.

Here's a few more cool ant facts:

  • Ants have 250,000 brain cells while humans have 10,000 million.
  • Combined weights of ants on earth is more than the combined weight of humans.
  • Ants began farming about 50 million years before humans thought to raise their own crops.
  • Ants rarely fight but when they do fight it is a fight to death most of the time.
  • Ants often sleep seven hours a day, while a type of ant i.e. fire ant takes about 250 naps each day.
  • The legs of the ant are very strong so they can run very quickly. If a man could run as fast for his size as an ant can, he could run as fast as a racehorse.

George Williams,
General Manager - Staff Entomologist

Pest Control, RI, Pest Control, MA 

Tiger Woods Home Demolished By Termites and Carpenter Ants

14 Mar 2012

Posted by Joseph Coupal

Termites and Carpenter Ants Drove Tiger's Ex to Demolish $12 Million Mansion

Finally, an explanation why Elin Nordegren, Tiger Woods' ex-wife, bulldozed the $12 million oceanfront mansion she bought only last year.

Her builder told People magazine the 17,000 foot, six bedroom home in North Palm Beach, Fla. wasn't built to code to withstand Florida hurricanes. To top it off, Habitat for Humanity found the place was crawling with termites and carpenter ants. So it made more sense structurally and economically to tear it down and start over with a new home.

The 32-year-old Nordegren, who's living nearby with her and Woods' two children, invited the charity to salvage tens of thousands of dollars worth of cabinets, hardware and fixtures before sending in the wrecking crew. Said Habitat's director of deconstruction, Bobbi Blodgett: When we pulled out the windows, the bugs were everywhere... To rebuild that house would have been ridiculous. We're so grateful to Elin. It's rare we get this kind of donation.

Nordegren got $100 million in her divorce from Woods so she can afford it. She never shared the demolished mansion with Woods, who recently appeared as an honorary captain for his alma mater Stanford at the Fiesta Bowl.

George Williams,
General Manager - Staff Entomologist

Pest Control, RI, Pest Control, MA 

Carpenter Ant Facts

19 Sep 2011

Posted by Joseph Coupal

Did you know that there are over a thousand different species of carpenter ant? Below are more fascinating facts about carpenter ants!

  • The carpenter ant is one of the largest of all the types of ant, ranging between a sixteenth of an inch to half an inch in length.
  • Queen carpenter ants have been known to grow to a massive one inch in size.
  • Carpenter ants get their name from the fact that they make their nests in wood, cutting, grooving, tunneling and sanding to make a series of long tunnels, or galleries, in which they live.
  • Carpenter ants are skilled carpenters and their wooden homes are perfectly smooth and rounded, sanded to perfection, and they leave no mess, no splinters, sawdust, chippings or other debris cluttering up the place.
  • The carpenter ants do not actually eat the wood they excavate galleries for nesting.
  • Most foraging is done at night between sunset and midnight during spring and summer months.
  • Sometimes workers travel up to 100 yards from a nest in search of food.
  • Carpenter ant colonies can range from several hundred ants to several thousand ants per colony.
  • There can be up to 15 colonies on a given property with ants in excess of 50,000!

George Williams
General Manager - Staff Entomologist

Pest Control, RI, Pest Control, MA

 


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