They can only be managed, Jim, not eliminated. I regularly patrol my lawn
and place poison bait on the nascent mounds. Helps if the neighbors do the
same as it takes longer for them to move back in. Clemson University has
been experimenting with a South American fly that hunts them and they are
effective, but officials are rightly reluctant to introduce another
non-native species. That plan often backfires.
Charlie
On Fri, Oct 9, 2015 at 2:50 PM, Jim Nichols <jhnichols@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> As you know, Charlie, hardly anything can kill them. Commercial ant
> poison doesn't seem to bother them.
>
> Jim Nichols
> Tullahoma, TN USA
>
>
> On 10/9/2015 1:43 PM, Charles Geilfuss wrote:
>
>> One of the odd things to come out of this weather event. Around here we
>> have a particularly nasty species of ant called Fire Ants. They were
>> introduced into Texas from South America back in the 1940's and over time
>> have spread all over the southeast. They are very aggressive and have a
>> nasty bite that forms a pustule that is slow to heal. Any hope that this
>> weather event would drown these suckers was dashed when someone saw this:
>>
>>
>>
>> http://abc7.com/weather/ants-form-floating-island-to-combat-flooding-in-south-carolina/1021709/
>>
>> Charlie
>>
>
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