Small sized ants:
(Inside and Outside)
Large sized ants:
(Inside and Outside)
Carpenter Ants
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Click on the ants to the left for more information on identification, pictures, habits, and recommended products and procedures.
You will find descriptions and recommendations for control of the more common household ants such as the
the:
Argentine, Pharoah, Carpenter, Fire, Ghost, Odorous House ants
and Leaf cutter ants.
You will also find links to other entomology sites concerned
with ants and a handy link to determine the difference between the termite or the ant.
A good ant bait program is the recommended way to control or eliminate most ants.
For the LARGER CARPENTER ANTS :
Advance Carpenter ant bait and Maxforce Carpenter Ant Gel for carpenter ants are excellent baits.
The Advance Carpenter Ant bait is designed for their protein feeding needs and the MaxForce Carpenter Ant Gel is designed for their sweet dietary needs.
There are to baiting for carpenter ants, and that is treating the nest directly.
For the SMALL ANTS:
Maxforce, Floroguard Bait Stations, and Maxforce Granulars are excellent products for protein and greese feeding ants.
For sugar feeding ants we recomend using our sugar based baits like : Maxforce Ant Killer Ant Bait Gel
Unless you can treat the nest directly, spraying is not an effective solution for small ants.
We have a section on to help you with the recommended baits.
Ants live practically everywhere but are most abundant in warm climates.
There are about 10,000 kinds, or "species," of ants. Within each species there are usually many different types.
Ants are social insects that live in colonies and are some of the most successful insects.
Ant colonies include one or more queens, as well as workers, eggs, larvae, and pupae.
The worker ants maintain their developed structures known as nests.
Nests protect the ants against their enemies, offer some protection against extremes of weather, and often are placed close to water and food sources.
Some ant species nest in the ground, oftentimes under concrete or slabs.
Some species are found in wood, such as fence posts, dead logs, hollow trees, or within buildings.
Termites are also found in wood, but their damage will be a lot more extensive
because carpenter ants will only dig out or hollow out a cavity known as a nest gallery.
Ants cannot eat wood as do termites because they can't digest cellulose.
The body structure of an ant is typical of almost all insects: six-legged, with a tough "outside skeleton",called the exoskeleon,
encasing three separate body parts, and with a two multi-purpose antennae.
Unlike most other insects, ants have a waist, making it easier to identify.
The exoskeleton protects it from the weather, injury and water loss.
This shell contains varying amounts of an organic compound called "chitin."
Insects with external skeletons have great strength for their size.
Have you ever seen an ant dragging another insect many times its weight?
It is the ant's exoskeleton and muscle arrangement that gives it its strength.
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