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Keyword: crazyants

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  • Travis County approves funding to control crazy ants population

    05/30/2018 11:20:28 AM PDT · by bgill · 40 replies
    kxan ^ | May 30, 2018 | Lauren Kravets
    Travis County is partnering with the University of Texas at Austin to evaluate a pathogen as a biological control agent for tawny crazy ants. The invasive ants can threaten your yards and get into your home. They also threaten songbirds and some endangered species. Researchers at UT will introduce the microsporidian pathogen by inoculating tawny crazy ant colonies. In prior research, experts found the pathogen may significantly reduce TCA populations.
  • How does one kill crazy ants (tawny ants) here in the South Central Texas region?

    11/13/2016 1:48:53 PM PST · by MeneMeneTekelUpharsin · 125 replies
    Ant problems | 13 November 2016 | Mene Mene Tekel Upharsin
    How does one kill crazy ants in a do-it-yourself way? We've put down Boric Acid and flea spray, both of which kill them. But, they keep coming back by the thousands. Any ideas?
  • ANTS: Good News Vs Bad News

    08/24/2014 5:11:16 PM PDT · by Yosemitest · 67 replies
    Many | Aug 24, 2014 | Yosemitest
    ANTS: Good News Vs Bad News How many of you are familiar with Fire Ants? How many of you wished they would go away? THE GOOD NEWS: Fire Ants are leaving.THE BAD NEWS:“Rasberry Crazy Ants” (in honor of the Texas exterminator that discovered them), a.k.a. "Tawny crazy ants" , and scientifically know as Nylanderia fulva as driving them out. "I want my Fire Ants back!" is being said by many across Mississippi. Because these Rasberry crazy ants are much harder to control, and they get into everything. They get into the insulation in your home, into your electronics, into your...
  • The Rise of the Crazy Ants

    04/21/2014 7:02:53 AM PDT · by Red Badger · 33 replies
    www.scientificamerican.com ^ | Feb 13, 2014 | By Dina Fine Maron
    The English had the longbow. The Spanish had steel. Tawny crazy ants have their own formidable weapon—a protective acid sheath—that protects them against fire ant enemies. The revelation comes from a new study published this week. Named for their butterscotch color and erratic movements, tawny crazy ants are the newest insect invaders sprawling throughout Texas and the Gulf states, unseating the reigning imported fire ants that have infested the region. Teeming out of electrical outlets and short-circuiting electronics, the tiny reddish-brown crazy ants have been making headlines as their numbers climb in the southeastern U.S. In some locales they can...
  • Houston braces for invasion of 'Crazy Ants'

    03/27/2014 6:43:30 AM PDT · by listenhillary · 118 replies
    Fox News ^ | March 26, 2014 | Robert Gearty
    This is one horror film plot that may be all too real: Billions of voracious ants are about to descend on the Houston area, destroying entire homes and anything else that gets in their way. Rasberry Crazy Ants, even more destructive and mobile than their angry cousins, fire ants, are just weeks away from descending on the largest city in Texas. Since 2008, the ants, which entomologists believe came to Texas from South America aboard a cargo ship in the 1930s, have expanded their presence to 27 counties from just eight. Once in a home, they zero in on electrical...
  • 'Crazy' ants driving out fire ants in southeast

    05/20/2013 5:39:08 AM PDT · by SoFloFreeper · 61 replies
    Fox ^ | 5/20/13 | Douglas Main
    Invasive fire ants have been a thorn in the sides of Southerners for years. But another invasive species, the so-called "crazy" ant that many describe as being worse has arrived and is displacing fire ants in several places. "When you talk to folks who live in the invaded areas, they tell you they want their fire ants back," said Edward LeBrun, a researcher at the University of Texas at Austin, in a statement from the school. "Fire ants are in many ways very polite. They live in your yard. They form mounds and stay there, and they only interact with...
  • Growing spread of crazy ants in Texas is no laughing matter

    09/09/2009 8:51:04 AM PDT · by Dysart · 35 replies · 1,851+ views
    FWST ^ | BILL HANNA 
    Something crazy is spreading across Texas, and it may be so destructive that one day it will make Texans actually miss the hated fire ant. Crazy ants, so named because they move in all directions rather than in a straight line, first surfaced in Houston seven years ago and had previously been confirmed in 14 Southeast Texas counties as far north as Huntsville. But now the ants have been seen beyond the Houston area, with confirmed sightings in San Antonio and in Jim Hogg County in the Rio Grande Valley. This discovery is viewed as "a significant change" by researchers...