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Targeted removal of ant colonies in ecological experiments, using hot water

[Scientific Papers] http://www.scipapers.com    2007-11-16  

     Targeted removal of ant colonies in ecological experiments, using hot water

    Walter R. Tschinkela and Joshua R. King

    Department of Biological Science, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL 32306-4370

    Abstract

    Ecological experiments on fire ants cannot, or should not, use poison baits to eliminate the fire ants because such baits are not specific to fire ants, or even to ants. Hot water is an extremely effective and specific killing agent for fire ant colonies, but producing large amounts of hot water in the field, and making the production apparatus mobile have been problematical. The construction and use of a charcoal-fired kiln made from a 55-gal. oil drum lined with a sand-fireclay mixture is described. An automobile heater fan powered from a 12-v battery provided a draft. Dual bilge pumps pumped water from a large tank through a long coil of copper tubing within the kiln to produce 4 to 5 l. of hot water per min. The hot water was collected in 20 l. buckets and poured into fire ant nests previously opened by piercing with a stick. The entire assembly was transported in and operated from the back of a pickup truck.

    Five experimental plots containing 32 to 38 colonies of the fire ant, Solenopsis invicta, Buren (Hymenoptera: Formicidae), were treated with hot water over a period of two years. All colonies on the treatment plots were treated twice with hot water early in 2004, reducing their numbers to zero. However new colonies were formed, and mature colonies expanded into the plots. A third treatment was made in the spring of 2005, after which fire ant populations were suppressed for over a year. Whereas the 5 control plots contained a total of 166 mostly large colonies, the 5 treatment plots contained no live colonies at all. Averaged over a two-year period, a 70% reduction in total number of colonies was achieved (P < 0.001) on the treatment plots, and a 93% reduction of large, mature colonies. Over this same time span, the number of colonies in control plots remained stable. The reduction in colony numbers on the treatment plots was reflected in the pitfall trap samples that recorded a 60% reduction in fire ants.

    Keywords: fire ant, Solenopsis invicta

    Correspondence: a tschinkel@bio.fsu.edu, jking@bio.fsu.edu

    Received: 25 May 2006 | Accepted: 31 December 2006 | Published: 9 July 2007

     

  
Targeted removal of ant colonies in ecological experiments, using hot water
Comparative study of nest architecture and colony structure of the fungus-growing ants, Mycocepurus goeldii and M. smithii     Natural history of the slave making ant, Polyergus lucidus, sensu lato in northern Florida and its three Formica pallidefulva group hosts
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