Archive for the ‘Ants’ Category

How Can You Tell If You Have Carpenter Ants?

Wednesday, November 10th, 2010

Carpenter ants vary in size and color but are usually large (1/4 to 1/2 inch) and blackish. You may see worker ants travelling through rooms in search for water or food, or winged ants flying in hopes of escaping to the wild. Occasionally, winged carpenter ants will swarm inside a home. This usually happens in the spring and are a sure sign that a colony has been nesting somewhere inside the structure. Most carpenter ant infestations are small in number, generating only 20 or 30 swarmers. But this population can grow as the ants look for a warm place to spend the winter. If you see more than a few winged black ants in or around your home, steps should be taken to get rid of carpenter ants before they become a more serious problem.

Carpenter ants forage for food within great distances of their nests, and may establish outposts in a number of different locations – both inside and outside of a structure.  Worker ants can travel up to the length of a football field looking for food. Carpenter ants construct two different kinds of nests. Parent colonies mature to contain an egg-laying queen, her brood and 2000 or more worker ants. Satellite colonies, on the other hand, may have large numbers of worker ants but no queen, eggs or young larvae. The carpenter ants inside a home may have originated from the parent colony or from one or more satellite nests. For example, the ants may be coming from the parent nest located outdoors in a tree stump, landscape timber or woodpile, or from one or more satellite nests hidden behind a wall in the kitchen or bathroom, or perhaps from wood dampened by a roof leak in the attic.

The first sign of a carpenter ant infestation is usually the sighting of numerous workers throughout the home.  Indoor infestations can be tracked by points of entry such as attic vents, foundations, cracks, electric wires, pipes and telephone lines. Carpenter ants prefer to nest in structural lumber such as wall voids, hollow doors, windows and foam panels. They typically seek wood that has been softened by moisture, decay or other insects. A positive indication that an active, mature infestation is present is the emergence of large winged ants from walls, ceilings, or crawl spaces.

The mess they leave behind while building their nests often remains hidden behind a wall or in some other concealed area.  In addition to structural lumber, sites such as hollow-core doors, window headers, wall voids, and foam panels are particularly attractive to carpenter ants.

Although carpenter ants do not intentionally destroy wooden structures, they are capable of damaging any wood within which they nest. Carpenter ant infestations can become severe when left untreated, and in some cases, a colony of carpenter ants can develop satellite nests. In order to control an infestation, it is important to identify carpenter ants and their nests. Worker carpenter ants are active mostly at night, so you may not see any activity during normal working hours.

Probing the wood with a screwdriver helps reveal the excavated galleries. Another technique for locating hidden nests is to tap along baseboards and other wood surfaces with the blunt end of a screwdriver, listening for the hollow sound of damaged wood. If a nest is nearby, carpenter ants often will respond by making a clicking or “rustling” sound within the nest, similar to the crinkling of cellophane. You can also use a stethoscope to listen to sounds of carpenter ants deep within your walls.

For a free estimate, give us a call at 781-986-0701 and mention that you found us from this article.

Tim Taylor, President of Heritage Pest Control in Randolph, MA, is an expert in pest control, with more than 20 years of education and experience in residential and commercial pest control.  Tim has an extensive background in entomology, and is a member of the National and New England Pest Management Associations and the Randolph Chamber of Commerce. Tim is also a 29-year member of the National Guard and is active in national and community activities including Pop Warner Football. Heritage Pest Control serves the greater Boston area including the suburbs of Brookline, Cambridge, Brighton, Allston, Milton, Quincy, Braintree and Canton. For more information, or to contact Tim, CLICK HERE to send a note to Tim or call him at 781-986-0701.

The Damage Ants Do: Are They Carpenter Ants or Termites?

Wednesday, November 10th, 2010

Are you finding big black ants in your house? Have you found one or two in the kitchen or bathroom? Have you tried to spray these areas, but find the ants keep coming back? If this sounds like what you are experiencing, you probably have an infestation of carpenter ants.

Carpenter ants not only are unpleasant sights for homeowners. They cause messes, as well as structural and other damage to the homes where they take up residence.  The damage caused by carpenter ants is a result of nesting. Worker ants excavate galleries for queens to lay eggs and for young ants to develop. You may have one or many more nests in or around your home. The potential damage you may suffer depends on how many nests are actually present within the structure, and how long the infestation has been active. As the number of individual ants inside a colony grows, their expansion through the wood increases, and the more damage they cause. This damage may include causing water leaks around pipes in your kitchen/bathroom/basement, short circuiting your dishwasher, swarming in your kitchen, and destroying wood structures.

Once a colony of carpenter ants has established itself in your home, it will grow and cause increasingly more damage.  Carpenter ants prefer wood that is moist, or is already rotted and should have been replaced. But sometimes they will nest in perfectly dry and healthy wood. Nests are more likely to be found in wood dampened by water leaks, such as around sinks, bathtubs, poorly sealed windows, door frames, roof leaks and poorly flashed chimneys.  Carpenter ants find entries to homes through heating and cooling equipment ducts, windows, telephone wires and cable lines, areas where trees are adjacent to a structure, sheds, porches and firewood stacked near your house. Look for tree branches that may be just above or in contact with the roof.  Firewood piles are prime nesting sites, and nests are often found in the wall void behind a dishwasher, or in a hollow porch column.

While both carpenter ants and termites damage wood, the type of damage they do and the techniques to prevent and get rid of them vary.

However, carpenter ants gain no nutritional value from wood, but damage it to make nests. The immediate damage caused by carpenter ants is not as severe as termite damage. But, carpenter ant nests that go undetected may cause significant damage over a period of years.

To tell if you have carpenter ants or a termite infestation, examine the wood where they have made their nests. While the surface of wood may appear undamaged, carpenter ant galleries can be identified by telltale signs. Because they clean and polish the galleries of their nests, you will see smooth walls that have a sandpapered appearance. Worker ants eject unwanted debris through holes in their nest galleries. This debris is called “frass” and looks like the scraps produced from sharpening a pencil.  You will see these shavings, debris, dead insects and other debris outside of nest openings, especially around windowsills, trapped in spider webs, on window ledges or in light fixtures.

On the other hand, termites and the larvae of some beetles actually eat wood. Wood damaged by termites will contain a large amount of soil or mud-like material. Winged carpenter ants can be distinguished from termites by their larger size and shape of their antennae, waist and wings.

For a free estimate, give us a call at 781-986-0701 and mention that you found us from this article.

Tim Taylor, President of Heritage Pest Control in Randolph, MA, is an expert in pest control, with more than 20 years of education and experience in residential and commercial pest control.  Tim has an extensive background in entomology, and is a member of the National and New England Pest Management Associations and the Randolph Chamber of Commerce. Tim is also a 29-year member of the National Guard and is active in national and community activities including Pop Warner Football. Heritage Pest Control serves the greater Boston area including the suburbs of Brookline, Cambridge, Brighton, Allston, Milton, Quincy, Braintree and Canton. For more information, or to contact Tim, CLICK HERE to send a note to Tim or call him at 781-986-0701.