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IDigMyGarden Forums > General Digging | |
Ants in my Compost
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#1 |
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Member
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: SW Louisiana about 50 miles north of the Gulf
Posts: 98
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What should you do to control ants from overtaking your compost heap?
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#2 |
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Member
Join Date: Mar 2012
USDA Zone: 6a
Posts: 33
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Is there a problem with ants in the compost?
I have ants in my compost bin. As I see it, they're just helping break down the food in there. Plus, getting rid of the ants would likely require some kind of poison. I don't think I'd want poison in my compost. |
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#3 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2011
Location: Jacksonville, Fl
USDA Zone: 9a
Posts: 1,407
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I've read a lot of things that give advice on how to get rid of them, but I never have tried those methods, I simply let them be and haven't seen any problems.
Some articles say if your pile gets too dry that will lead to too many ants, but that hasn't been my experience, since I keep my pile moist, yet I always have ants -- lots of ants; ants are just tough, they can tolerate dry conditions as well as moist. |
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#4 |
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My Yard Is Too Small!
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The community garden I volunteer at has a big pile of compost that was delivered.. it's well aged and quite dry, and there are some fire ants living in parts of the pile now. That's rather unpleasant.
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#5 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2011
Location: Jacksonville, Fl
USDA Zone: 9a
Posts: 1,407
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Yeah, fire ants are mean. I've read a few things about them, because I've had some run ins with them, gotta show them a little more respect. I was on a bicycling trip up the east coast and setup my tent near a nest...that was ugly.
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#6 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2011
Location: Jacksonville, Fl
USDA Zone: 9a
Posts: 1,407
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BTW, I remember watching a special on the Discovery Channel about introducing a fly that drives them crazy and in the end kills them. Here's an article, but don't know how the program is currently doing. http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/story?id=119787&page=1
Flies to Combat Pesky Fire Ants The South’s newest weapon against the dreaded fire ant sounds like something out of a sci-fi thriller: An insect whose larvae eat the heads off their prey. The Agriculture Department plans to release hundreds of thousands of tiny ant-eating flies in Georgia, across the South and possibly in California, where the fire ants have now spread. USDA says the gnat-like phorid flies, imported from Brazil, pose no harm to anybody or anything other than fire ants. “It is a self-sustaining biocontrol,” said Richard Brenner, who leads a USDA research team in Florida. Releasing flies at 12 sites per state could blanket the region within five years, he said. Ants Panic and Flee The flies don’t kill enough of the ants to destroy colonies, but they cause enough panic to keep the ants in check, Brenner said. The ants, which have an innate fear of the flies, stop foraging and flee when they spot them, giving native ants a chance to move back into the territory. Fire ants can make life miserable for homeowners and gardeners and cause billions of dollars in damage every year to air conditioners, electrical equipment and farms, experts say. The ants can blind and even kill livestock and wildlife, and their sting is occasionally fatal to humans. The ants, which are native to South America, have no natural enemies in the United States. Chemical treatments are only temporarily effective. The phorid fly helps keep the ants under control in Brazil and Argentina, where infestation levels are far lower than they are in the United States. Larvae Decapitate, Eat Brain The flies hover over ant mounds before darting down and injecting a torpedo-like egg into the ants. After the egg hatches, the maggot decapitates the ant by eating the brain and other contents of the head. The maggot later turns into a fly and the cycle is repeated. Some scientists are skeptical that there are enough native ants in the South to compete with the fire ants, even with the help of the flies. The native ants have either been poisoned by humans or driven away by fire ants. “You’ve got to have a really good competing ant population for the phorid flies to have an effect,” said Brad Vinson, an entomologist at Texas A&M University. Scientists also are studying other biological enemies of the fire ant, including a microorganism and a parasitic ant. “Anything that will take care of these fire ants will be fine with me, as long as it doesn’t hurt anything else or the environment,” said Kym Bell, a Cottondale, Ala., woman whose 5-year-old daughter missed several days of kindergarten this fall because of repeated ant bites on her school playground. The stings left welts the size of a half dollar on her skin. The Agriculture Department started studying the flies in 1993 to see if they could harm anything other than fire ants. Nothing other than the fire ants would attract them, including animal dung or human waste, so the government is confident they will be completely safe for the environment, Brenner said. Trial Run Still Being Studied The flies were released at four sites near Gainesville, Fla., three years ago and now have spread to 700 square miles. USDA scientists are now studying the area to see how the flies have affected ant populations. As part of the federal project, Florida’s agriculture department will begin mass-rearing the flies next spring and will ship them to field sites in Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee and Texas. The project will cost USDA about $100,000. Discussions also are under way about releasing the flies in California, where parts of the Los Angeles area are under a federal quarantine intended to keep the ants from spreading. |
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