Kill Fire Ants Contact  Us
toll free 1-866-545-9064

Catalog » Ants Main Page » Odorous House Ant
| My Account  | Cart Contents | Checkout

Newsletter
Signup for our Newsletter:
Shopping Cart more
0 items
Products
Lawn & Garden Products-> (2)
Pest Control Products-> (24)
Articles
New Articles (0)
Ants Main Page (29)
Application Conversions
Blood Feeders (6)
Coleoptera Main Page (1)
Fabric and Paper Pests (1)
FAQ'S ->
Fleas (7)
Flies - Biting Flies
Flies - Non Biting / Stinging (2)
Glossary (1)
ID Your Pest
Mammal Pests - Vertebrate Ani (8)
Mosquito's (8)
Occasional Pests (1)
Roaches (10)
Spiders (6)
Stinging Insects (10)
Stored Product Pests. (7)
Termites (19)
Testimonials
Transmission of Pest / Disease
Quick Find
 
Use keywords to find the product you are looking for.
Advanced Search
Information
Shipping & Returns
Contact Us
Site Map


 


Shop our Online Catalog: General Insect & Pest Control

Odorous House Ant


Odorous house ant

COMMON NAME: Odorous house ant

SCIENTIFIC NAME: Tapinoma sessile (Say)

CLASSIORDERIFAMILY: InsectalHymenoptera/Formicidae

METAMORPHOSIS: Complete

INTRODUCTION. The pungent, "rotten-coconutlike" odor given off when this ant is crushed gives it its name. It is a native species and is found throughout the united States.

RECOGNITION. Workers monomorphic, about 1/16-1/8 long. Body brown to black. Antenna 12-segmented, without a club. Thorax lacks spines, profile unevenly rounded. Pedicel 1-segmented, with small node/segment hidden/concealed from view from above by base of gaster. Gaster with anal opening slitlike, lacking circlet of hairs. Stinger absent. Workers emit a disagreeable, rotten, coconut-like odor.

BIOLOGY. Colonies may be composed of several hundred to 100,000 ants. There are usually many queens in a colony. Developmental time (egg to adult) is 34-83 days, varying with temperature during summer months, and up to 6-7 months during the winter. Colonies typically produce 4-5 generations a year. Although they probably mate both inside and outside the nest, the first swarmers appear from May to mid-July. The workers and queens live for several years. Individuals from different colonies are not hostile to one another and workers normally move along trails.

HABITS. Inside, these ants usually construct their nests in wall voids especially around hot water pipes and heaters, in crevices around sinks, cupboards, etc. These ants prefer sweets but also eat foods with high protein content and grease such as meats and cheese.

Outside, they are often found in the nest of larger ants, in exposed soil, but mostly under objects. Workers feed on insects, seek honeydew and plant secretions, and even feed on seeds. They are extremely fond of honeydew and attend such honeydew-excreting insects as plantlice (aphids), scale insects, mealybugs, etc. They are most likely to enter buildings when their honeydew supply is reduced such as during rainy weather or with leaf fall in the autumn.

When workers are alarmed, they run around in an erratic manner with their gasters/abdomens raised up.

This article was published on Monday 31 December, 2007.

Back to main topic: Ants Main Page
Basic Ant Control Steps
ID Your Pest - Ants
ID Your Pest - Ants Free Identification service
Ants - How-to Control Argentine Ants
Argentine Ant
Little Black Ant
How-to Control Velvety Tree Ants
Pharaoh Ant
How-to Control Pharaoh Ants
Carpenter Ant
Control of Carpenter ants
Crazy Ants
Fire ant
How-to Control Fireants Indoors
Ant Biology & Baiting Tips for excellent control
How-to Control Fireants for a whole year!
Acrobat Ants
Bigheaded Ants
Thief Ant
Velvety Tree Ant
How-to Control Little Black Ants
Leaf Cutting Ants
How-to Control - Leaf Cutting Ants
PAVEMENT ANT
How-to Control - Pavement Ants
Ghost Ant
How-to Control -Ghost Ants
Field Ants

Current Reviews: 0
Write Review