CARPENTER ANTS:Carpenter ants are a nuisance by their presence when found in parts of
the home such as the kitchen, bathroom, living room and other
quarters. When 20 or more large winged and/or wingless ants are found
indoors, in the daytime near one location, it is possible that the
colony is well established in the home and the nest may have been
extended into sound wood, sometimes causing structural damage. They
do not eat wood, but often remove quantities of it to expand their
nest size. However, if only one to two large wingless ants are
erratically crawling, they may simply be foraging for food with the
nest located outside. Outdoors, they are frequently seen running over
plants and tree trunks or living in moist, partly rotten wood stumps.
Nevertheless, carpenter ant inquiries rank first over all other
household/structural pests in Ohio.
Identification
Carpenter ants are among the largest ants found in homes and live in
colonies containing three castes consisting of winged and wingless
queens, winged males and different sized workers. Winged males are
much smaller than winged queens. Wingless queens measure 5/8 inch,
winged queens 3/4 inch to the tips of their folded brownish wings,
small minor workers 1/4 inch and large major workers 1/2 inch.
Workers have some brown on them while queens are black. Workers have
large heads and a small thorax while adult swarmers have a smaller
head and large thorax. Carpenter ants have a smoothly rounded arched
(convex) shape to the top of the thorax when viewed from the side and
a pedicel between the thorax and abdomen consisting of only one
segment or node. They have constricted waists, elbowed antennas and
the reproductive's forewings are larger than the hindwings,
transparent or brownish and not easily removed. Adults are usually
black with some species red, brown or yellow occurring on parts of
the body and legs. Eggs are about 1/8-inch long, cream colored and
oval. Larvae are legless and grub-like, later pupating in tough
silken, tan-colored cocoons erroneously referred to as "ant eggs."
Life Cycle and Habits
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| Queen | Worker
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Winged male and female carpenter ants (swarmers) emerge from mature
colonies usually from March to July. After mating, males die and
newly fertilized females (mated for life), establish a new colony in
a small cavity in wood, under bark, etc. and each lays 15 to 20 eggs
in 15 days. The egg stage takes about 24 days, larval stage 21 days
and pupal stage 21 days or about 66 days from egg to adult at 70 to
90 degrees F. Cool weather may lengthen this period up to 10 months. The
colony does not produce swarmers until about three years later. A
mature colony, after three to six years, has 2,000 to 4,000
individuals. During the first brood, larvae are fed entirely by a
fluid secreted from the queen's mouth where she does not take food,
but uses stored fat reserves and wing muscles for her nourishment.
The few workers emerging from the first brood assume duties of the
colony, collecting food, excavating galleries to enlarge the nest and
tending the eggs, larvae and pupae of the second generation. Workers
regurgitate food for nourishment of the developing larvae and queen.
She has few duties except to lay eggs.
In later generations, workers of various sizes are produced
(polymorphism) into major and minor workers, that are all sterile
females. Males formed are winged swarmers. Larger "major" workers
guard the nest, battle intruders, explore and forage for food while
smaller "minor" workers expand the nest and care for the young.
workers, when disturbed, carry off the larvae and pupa, which must be
fed and tended or they die. In a mature colony, there is usually one
queen with 200 to 400 winged individuals produced as swarmers.
Workers have strong jaws and readily bite (sharp pinch) when
contacted.
Nests are usually established in soft, moist (not wet), decayed wood
or occasionally in an existing wood cavity or void area in a
structure that is perfectly dry. Workers cut galleries in the wood,
expanding the nest size for the enlarging colony. Galleries are
irregular, usually excavated with the wood grain (sometimes across
the grain) into softer portions of the wood. The walls of the nest
are smooth and clean (sandpapered appearance) with shredded
sawdust-like wood fragments, like chewed up toothpicks (frass),
carried from the nest and deposited outside. These piles of wood
fragments, often found beneath special openings (windows) or nest
openings, may contain portions of insects, empty seed coats, etc.
Carpenter ants do not eat wood but excavate wood galleries to rear
their young ants and carry aphids to plants, placing them on leaves
for the production of honey dew. The food diet is of great variety
(omnivorous) of both plant and animal origin such as plant juices,
fresh fruits, insects (living or dead), meats, syrup, honey, jelly,
sugar, grease, fat, honey dew (aphid excrement), etc. They feed
readily on termites and usually never co-exist with them in a home.
Workers are known to forage for food as far as 100 yards from their
nest.
Ohio State University Extension Fact Sheet
Entomology
1991 Kenny Road, Columbus, OH 43210-1090

Carpenter Ants in a tissue box. Carpenter Ants Feeding on a Sugar Cube.

This is a pile of frass (wood shavings and ant parts and dead ants that have all bee removed from the wood chambers)
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