English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

???

2006-10-21 04:46:17 · 8 answers · asked by cucumis_sativus 5 in Science & Mathematics Zoology

8 answers

they are red ants that when they bite you the poison causes you to feel like the bite is burning..



Funny and true story:
I actually got bit on my "nut sack" when I was like 5. The damn thing crawled up my shorts and WHAAAAMMOOOOOO!!!!
from that point on it was war... I have come up with some really interesting ways to destroy ant hills..hahaha
Ain't life funny?

2006-10-21 04:47:43 · answer #1 · answered by USMCstingray 7 · 4 1

Fire ants are stinging ants of which there are over 280 species worldwide.
A typical fire ant colony produces large mounds in open areas, and feeds mostly on young plants, seeds, and sometimes crickets. Fire ants often attack small animals and can kill them. Unlike many other ants, which bite and then spray acid on the wound, fire ants only bite to get a grip and then sting (from the abdomen) and inject a toxic alkaloid venom. For humans, this is a painful sting, which leaves a sensation similar to what one feels when they get burned by fire — hence the name fire ant — and the aftereffects of the sting can be deadly to sensitive individuals. The venom is both insecticidal and antibiotic. Researchers have proposed that nurse workers will spray their brood to protect them from microorganisms. The worker ants are blackish to reddish and vary from 3–6 mm in length.

Fire ants nest in the soil, often near moist areas, such as river banks, pond edges, watered lawns and highway edges. A single nest is usually less than a square yard, and may have several small openings on the surface or in cracks; the ants shift the entrance during the season and may move young ants between openings.

Colonies are founded by small groups of queens or single queens. Only one queen survives, and within a year or so, the colony expands into thousands of individuals.

Most fire ant species don't bother people, and rarely come into contact with humans; of the few that do, most do not get the rank of serious pests, as they are kept in check by parasites, predators, and competition with other ants. However, at least one species, Solenopsis invicta, commonly known as the Red imported fire ant (RIFA), has been moved around the world from its native range in South America and, in the absence of its predators and parasites, has become a major pest nearly everywhere it has been introduced, as is common for invasive species. This species was accidentally introduced into the United States via Brazilian cargo entering the port of Mobile, Alabama, in the 1930s. The ants have since spread from coastal areas of Alabama and now infest large parts of the Southern U.S., and have created a nuisance to farmers and homeowners alike from California to Maryland. Since 2001, this species has been spread to eastern Australia, the Philippines, Taiwan, and China.

In the southern United States phorid flies have been imported as an attempt to control fire ants by natural means. The genus Apocephalus, or ant-decapitating fly, of which 110 species have been documented, is a parasite of the ant in South America. Members of Apocephalus reproduce by laying eggs in the head of the ant. The larvae eat the contents of the fire ant's head and emerge several days later. The phorid flies have been widely introduced throughout the U. S. Southeast, starting with Travis, Brazos, and Dallas counties in Texas, as well as Mobile, Alabama, where the ants first entered North America. Not all introductions have been successful, but the fly has been established in some sites in every southeastern state

2006-10-21 11:49:11 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

They are very small ants, originally from South America that are very aggressive. They wipe out the native species of ants as they are migrating northward in America.

When they attack, a lot of them come at once. We can spot them from a large dirt mound made up of loose dirt that appears overnight. Push that mound over and you've got fire ants all over you. Their bite stings like hell. I've seen a nature video of a fire ant colony floating down a stream, as an ant ball, protecting their queen.

2006-10-21 11:53:48 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

Fire ants are stinging ants of which there are 280 species worldwide.

2006-10-22 12:26:29 · answer #4 · answered by farhan ferdous 4 · 0 0

Small ants that look like sugar ants, but the bite leaves a blister that itches for days. They are much smaller than red ants, and beigy brown in color.

2006-10-21 11:48:49 · answer #5 · answered by Catspaw 6 · 2 1

They are red ants that when then bite you, the bite burns like fire.

2006-10-21 11:48:18 · answer #6 · answered by Zoso 2 · 1 1

red ants, and when they bite it feels like fire.

2006-10-21 11:55:45 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

http://ipmworld.umn.edu/chapters/lockley.htm

This site may help!

2006-10-21 11:57:43 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers