Pest Control For Fire Ants

Wheeler’s Pest Control Has A Better Method!

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                                                                                                    (Photo credit: bartdrees) 

Fire Ants

California has two types of fire ants, the native fire ant and the red imported fire ant. Fire ants are different than normal ants we see in our homes and businesses. The fire ant has a stinger, like bees. It is also much more aggressive.

Fire Ant Pest Control

Treating fire ants isn’t as easy as heading to your local hardware store and picking up a pesticide to spray on a mound. Over-the-counter sprays will only kill a few of the foraging ants. The remaining ants will leave the nest and return when the pesticide dissipates.

Some untrained pest control operators will only sprinkle an insecticide over a mound. This is ineffective in controlling the whole colony because most fire ant mounds have multiple queens; and colonies may be spread over unseen areas and across multiple properties.

  University of Davis has developed a couple of effective fire ant control strategies, developed through years of research. They include a one-step wide area treatment or two step bait and mound treatment. They say the two-step method works best in fully infested areas (five or more mounds per quarter-acre of yard).

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                                                                                      (This photo shows a colony of reddish-brown fire ants. (Photo credit: Wikipedia) 

One Step Wide Area Treatment

If a homeowner is only dealing with a few fire ants, this wide area treatment is effective. It may require cooperation from other homeowners, as the infesting ants may be coming from multiple properties it also could take weeks or even months to work.

Using this method, a pest control professional distributes a granular product containing Fipronil over a property once a year, preferably in the early spring. Spread two pounds of Fipronil per 1000 square feet. Fipronil granular products, like Top Choice and Taurus G, are slow-acting but have season-long control. Best results will not be seen for six weeks after application. Treat a property evenly, and lightly water after the granules have been applied.

If the Fipronil granules are distributed after April, an additional application of fast acting fire ant baits may be necessary to reduce the fire ant population. The fire ants will be very active long before the Fipronil ever kicks in.

It’s important to note that this fire ant extermination method is ineffective at controlling other species of foraging ants, as it’s not a barrier treatment.

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Fire Ants (Photo credit: Marufish) 

Two Step Bait & Mound Treatment

The two-step bait and mound treatment approach has been proven effective at controlling fire ants, and is ideal for highly infested areas. During the first step of treatment, a pest control professional will distribute a fire ant bait insecticide over a property in the early spring or late fall. A few weeks after the baits have been applied to a property; the pest professional will treat each mound with an approved mound drench, granule, or dust pesticide.

Baits

One of the more environmentally sound ways to treat fire ants, is with baits. These baits are a combination of insecticide and corn. A fire ant worker will find the bait, bring it back to the nest, and share it with his friends and the queen. After ingesting the poisoned food, the ants will die.

Look for fire ant bait with one or more of the following active ingredients: indoxacarb, abamectin, s-methoprene, hydromethylnon, or pyriproxyfen. Put these baits down evenly throughout the property, when the ground is dry, and when you’re not expecting rain for the next 48 hours. Late afternoons and evening work best for baiting, as that’s when fire ants are actively foraging. Make sure the bait is fresh, and do not mix it with other substances like fertilizer.

Mound Treatments

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(Photo credit: gurdonark) 

A week or two after the application of fire ant bait, a pest control professional must chemically treat each individual ant mound with dusts, drenches, or granules.

Liquid drenches generally eliminate ants in mounds within a few hours and leave little surface residue after application. Use a long injection probe to apply Temprid SC, Tempo or Suspend under high pressure into mounds.

Granular products are rather fast acting. They require putting granules on and around the mound and then sprinkling one to two gallons of water on without alarming the fire ants inside the mound. Maxforce Complete Granular Insect Bait provides fast knockdown and long-term control.

Use Advion Fire Ant bait!!!!

Advion Fire Ant “Bait’, NOT THE INSECTCIDE, kills the entire in a matter of days, not weeks are months.

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