There are two good things about Argentine Ants. First, they don't sting. They can bite, but they aren't aggressive and being so small their bite is negligible. Second, they dominate all other insects. They will kill all your fire ants and carpenter ants and termites. If you had a problem with these destructive pests the Argentine Ants will take them out. The catch is that afterwards you have Argentine Ants instead, and while they may not be as painful or destructive, unless you LIKE having ants everywhere they become very annoying very quickly. The other problem is that they kill EVERYTHING, including desirable bugs, frogs, snakes, birds, whatever they can overwhelm and devour.
In their native environment in South America there are predators who keep the Argentine Ant in check, but in more urbanized and civilized nations like the US there are no native predators so there's nothing to stop their spread and domination of the environment. It's up to us to stop the little monsters.
So far in my battle against them I've learned a few things. They're pretty easy to kill, and if you taint or destroy their scent trail after you kill the forager ants then you can stop them from swarming. This requires you to literally carry ant spray around with you all the time. Ortho makes a couple of good products for this. Ortho Home Defense and their orange oil based Indoor Ant Spray both kill them and destroy the scent trail. In addition both of these are not harmful to humans unless you spray yourself in the eyes. The Indoor Spray is even safe around food or even in food. What's more, the Indoor Spray makes a fairly good furniture polish and glass cleaner as well. The only catch is its orange scent which not everyone likes. The shortcoming of these sprays is that although they theoretically destroy the scent trails for up to two weeks and deter further ant explorations in the areas where they are sprayed, in actuality the duration of their deterrent effect is less than a week, so constant spraying is necessary. Supposedly inch-long clips from a flea-collar will keep them out of enclosed spaces like fuse boxes and outdoor lights, but you can't use these near food so they're no help in the kitchen.






Article comments
— go to most recent comments1 - Tony
Hey,
How's your problem with the Argentine Ants going? Any luck? I know exactly how you feel...I thought I had odorous house ants, but realize that my house has been taken over by these nasty little things. The terro liquid baits haven't worked for me. After a week, some of the the ants are still going after it but, it's now drawing out the invasion force who has on interest in the food, but only in marking every horizontal inch of the house, and after that ever vertical surface inch of the house. I think I'm ready to sell my house, but that probably won't work, as they'll soon take over the entire city!
2 - Dave Nalle
The cold weather has more or less subdued them, and I've stocked up on some specialized baits to deal with them this Spring. I'll keep you updated.
Dave
3 - Silas Kain
After devouring all the information you supplied, Dave, I am fascinated. Have they started to hit the Northeast yet? Also, is there a way these nasty little things could be incorporated into military weaponry?
4 - Dave Nalle
I don't think they're farther north than Oklahoma yet, and they don't seem to like cold weather, so you guys may be safe up north.
The weird thing is that my wife actually likes them. She'd rather have the periodic insane swarms in the house than get bitten by fire ants while working in the yard. Of course she's not the one who has to clean up all the bodies and figure out how to stop them from getting in.
I also have to admit to having eaten an awful lot of them. With the scouts everywhere I've become less sensitive to the occasional tiny visitor on my hot dog bun or milano cookie.
As for military applications, the only actual use they seem to have is eating glue in obscure locations. I think this might have industrial value but I'm not sure about the military. Plus they do seem to be the ultimate cure for termites and carpenter ants.
Dave
5 - bobby b
I'm battling an army of ants with Terro as we speak, seems to be attracting a s#itload of them, but we live next door to an ice cream shop and I'm not so sure something this simple can tackle the problem. I hope I am wrong as I've heard nothign but good reviews with Terro Liquis Bait. God speed to you all.
6 - Dave Nalle
What kind of ants are they? Our Argentine Ants have just emerged for the first time since last year, so I'm in the process of deploying two different kinds of bait. We'll see how it works out.
Dave
7 - Dave Nalle
What kind of ants are they? Our Argentine Ants have just emerged for the first time since last year, so I'm in the process of deploying two different kinds of bait. We'll see how it works out.
Dave
8 - Dave Nalle
What kind of ants are they? Our Argentine Ants have just emerged for the first time since last year, so I'm in the process of deploying two different kinds of bait. We'll see how it works out.
Dave
9 - Anty
Actually, the Argentine Ant in the U.S. is not a recent occurance.
It has been in the US since around 1891, and moved into CA in 1905, but they have more recently reached "pest" levels in the SW U.S.
10 - PETER BRYANT
In my place the Daddy Longlegs Spiders Photos do a great job of feasting on Argentine ants.
11 - Victor Plenty
Daddy Longlegs spiders are great for pest control. They'll even eat other spiders. Unfortunately that won't help people who habitually destroy any daddy longlegs they find in the house.
12 - Dave Nalle
Mud Dauber wasps are also good for spider control and they don't sting, but the problem is that they build nests inside your appliances.
Dave
13 - Nancy Peterson
I've lived in San Diego in the same house for about 18 years but these little bugger have only become a serious problem for about 5 years now. I understand they destroy all the indigenous ant populations as well as every other kind of insect. The one thing in your posting I would seriously debate is the following, "First, they don't sting. They can bite, but they aren't aggressive and being so small their bite is negligible." No way! Their bite is the worst insect bite I've ever experienced. If they don't sting, they emit an acid when they bite because it burns like hell for several minutes afterward! Interstingly, they don't seem attracted to most people but when they are, they can make life most miserable. If all they did was crawl on me I could maybe deal with that, but their bites make me long for the days when I lived in New York and all I had to contend with were cockroaches! They even seem to overcome repellant sprays within such a short time that I've taken to taping up all the base boards in my bedroom. The base boards look terrible but my need for a decent nights sleep causes me not to care. I used to think that after a nuclear holocaust all that would remain would be roaches and fleas. I've since added the Argentine ant to the equation.
14 - Richard Brodie
In their native environment in South America there are predators who keep the Argentine Ant in check
So why not start importing these predators?
15 - Nancy Peterson
It seems in Argentina there are individual colonies with differnt DNA which attack each other and keep each other in check. Not so in CA. Or in Europe--there is a colony which starts in Spain and runs all the way thru France. The CA colony occupies the entire state. Take an ant from San Diego and put in down in San Fransisco and it will be recognized as a member and not attacked. One big colony! Pretty scary.
16 - STM
Dave: Good piece. The buggers have been in Australia since the fifties and are absolute pests .... literally and figuratively.
They get into every bloody thing: even screw-top jars and packets of unopened foodstuffs.
But here's the best one. Because they are so small, they can actually get into your refrigerator, usually through tiny breaks in the magnetic seal.
Whenever we find small ants in the cupboards, fridge, etc, over the long-hot summer, you can bet they are argentines.
However, the fire ant, despite having been introduced somehow in the northern state of Queensland (where it's very hot, like the southern states of the US), so far hasn't thrived here.
(Lucky, because imported species have a habit of going out of control here: take the rabbit and the cane toad, both prolific. You almost can't walk around at night in Queensland and now parts of far northern New South Wales without treading on a bloody cane toad. I recommend carrying a five-iron.)
In regard to the fire ant, I'm extremely glad ... and it is probably down to that wonderful nuisance, the argentine ant. I know which I'd rather have - one's a pest that gets into your sugar container, the other's a bastard of a thing that has a painful bite and causes an awful rash.
Sitting on an argentine ant nest at a picnic just means losing a sandwich. Sitting on a fire-ant nest at a picnic potentially means losing part of your anatomy.
17 - Nancy Peterson
Dave, this is interesting. you mentioned they get into your cookies. I've heard a lot about them liking sweet things. But ours are strictly carnivors and grease lovers.The tiniest particle of meat or a dead insect will get them swarming. But they don't bother sweets or starches or anything else. We used to have a problem here with another kind of ant which was strictly carniverous too. But the Argentines wiped them out. Do you suppose they can absorb some of the DNA preferences of their prey which will determine what they like to eat? Because just from these postings I can see that their behavior seems to vary with the geograhical location. Say, STM maybe the Argentines are keeping the fire ants under control. At least they'd be good for something! :-)
18 - STM
I'd also like to reply to the people who recommend natural control ... by spiders.
As you'd probably be aware, just about every second species of spider in Australia is highly venomous, and others can just give you a nasty bite.
However, given the humidity in Sydney over summer which creates the perfect environment for swarms of mosquitoes, leaving spiders around the place is the lesser of two evils. Yes, they do eat ants too. They also eat flies and moths, which also plague us over summer.
Some of our friends think we're mad to leave the spiders around the joint, but some are starting to come around as we have been able to show that it really cuts down on mossie bites.
We have one really nasty looking black one that lives behind a painting near our front door. It's been there a long time and scuttles off when it sees us.
As it often gets into the door jamb, it is now affectionately known as the "door-crack spider".
We've had visitors from overseas almost suffering heart attacks when coming or leaving when they spot it. Tee hee. We always have such good sport with Brits and Americans.
I usually tell them that if they get bitten, there's an anti-venom available and it's not a problem provided you can get to the hospital within four and half minutes.
The mormons and jehovah's witnesses now walk straight past our place as a result.
So there's extra pest control as well.
19 - Scott
I hate those Argentine ants. I was gloriously free of them for the past six months or so, but it's now Indian summer in the San Francisco Bay Area (the warmest time of the year here). When it gets warm they go wild and they find ways into my apartment (not that hard since it's old and has a good number of crack and holes). I had a small trail tonight I hope I figure where they're coming in. I hope I wiped out their scent trail and they'll give up for a while.
Don't pay any attention to most of the natural/organic/green kinds of remedies you'll read about on the Internet since they mostly won't work as deterrents. You're not going to keep them out with peppermint leaves or red pepper or any of the rest. They'll just laugh at you for being a sucker. I never tried diomatacious (sp?) earth, but did try some commercial borax-based bait which they seemed to love, but didn't seem to do much to kill the colony. Spraying them with Windex or vinegar-based cleaner seems to kill them and wiping with it might conceal their scent trail slightly. Don't let Windex dry in puddles, it leaves blue stains.
If you can find where they're coming in you want to seal it up if you can. I didn't have really huge infestations, but hot glue (like the craft-y kind) seemed to work reasonably well for me and I never noticed them eating it. Though it might stick to the paint and look like someone filled the cracks with golden snot.
Once I filled in their favorite cracks they managed to crawl through the walls and come out power outlets and from behind the face plates. I had previously discovered that about the only household product they didn't like to cross was mounds of cleanser like Ajax, Comet, or Old Dutch. If they got daring enough to crawl over it then it seemed to kill them or dehydrate them or something shortly after contact. They also didn't seem to like the nasty bleachy scent. I chucked some cleanser in the plug housing and hot glued around the edges of the face plates. That seemed to make them think it wasn't worth it and about that time I think they began visiting other apartments in my building instead since I had neighbors who mentioned having ant problems some time after that and they had mostly abandoned my apartment.
Rumor has it that you can get magic bug chalk in Chinatown and that it works pretty well. I guess you make chalk lines with it and they won't cross the lines (or if they do, they die). From looking on the Internet it seems the magic chalk is probably pretty toxic, though. I think they don't want people using it since there have been cases of kids getting it confused with regular chalk and playing with it and getting poisoned. I also wouldn't want to use it near food. I never tried it, but my Chinese and Chinese-American friends say it works pretty well.
Those ants are EVIL.
20 - Dr Dreadful
Windex??
So the Dad in My Big Fat Greek Wedding was right...
21 - STM
Sounds like you're dancing a merry dance there Scott - the Argentine ant tango.
Mate, you will just drive yourself nuts trying to stop the bastards. I recommend living with it.
Ruined sugar has to be better than piles of bleach, Ajax, what have you, and hot glue all over the joint.
Failing that, bring in the spiders. Yours aren't venomous, so it could work.
One way or the other, though, you are well and truly buggered by the sounds of things. And you and Dave are right - they are evil ants. :)
22 - Dave Nalle
In my experience Windex isn't so effective. What DOES work and damned well, is a geranium based and scented cleaning liquid made by a company called Meyers (Whole Foods carries it). It doesn't have as much of the lasting deterrent power of the synthetic permethrin based spray made by Ortho - which does a damned fine job - but it's safe for just about everything (except for goldfish for some reason) and can even be sprayed in the vicinity of food with no problems. It also smells nice and cleans quite effectively.
Dave
23 - Christopher Rose
If humankind becomes extinct, ants will probably take over the planet. I hate them all!
24 - Dr Dreadful
Whole Foods? Man, Dave, your ant problem must be truly horrendous if you're prepared to make that kind of investment.
My wife re-christened Whole Foods "Whole Paycheck".
Chris, did you ever see that old sci-fi movie (I think it came out in the mid-70s) called Phase 4? It was about ants* taking over the world. Scary stuff.
* Not giant ones either. Regular-sized ones.
25 - Dave Nalle
Your wife's got that about right. It's impossible to go in there without spending $150, which gets you at most 2 sacks of groceries.
Dave