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SIZE: 1/10 to 1/8 inch (2-3mm)
COLOR: Brown to black
DESCRIPTION
The
pavement ant is a small, brown to black ant with pale legs
and a black abdomen. Pavement ants feed on a variety of materials,
including live and dead insects, honeydew from aphids, meats,
grease, etc. They often enter houses looking for food. They
may become numerous in a short period of time in a kitchen
or outside on a patio.
HABITAT
Pavement
ants are very common in the eastern United States. These small,
brown to black ants usually nest under stones, concrete slabs,
at the edge of pavements, and in houses in crevices in woodwork
and masonry.
LIFE
CYCLE
New
ant colonies are started by a single queen that lays the eggs
and tends the brood that develops into worker ants. Tending
of the brood is then taken over by the workers, which shift
the brood from place to place as moisture and temperature fluctuate
in the nest. When workers forage for food for the queen and
her young, they often enter houses and become a nuisance.
TYPE
OF DAMAGE
They
feed on animal food, grease, seeds, etc.
INTERESTING
FACTS: Ants feed on almost anything consumed by
humans.
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