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Synonymous Names

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Camponotus herculeanus japonicus Mayr (Yasumatsu & Brown, 1951) from: http://ant.edb.miyakyo-u.ac.jp/E/Taxo/F80902.html


Should probably be mentioned on the page somewhere. If nothing else, this'll serve as a note for me to add it in when I get the chance.--Wynler|Talk 20:51, 19 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Carpenter Ants: Control Measures

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Carpenter ants generally live in nests of up to several thousand individuals. The queen and all of the workers need to be killed to eliminate the problem. Since they favor moist wood as a habitat, any condition that promotes moisture should be eliminated. The easiest of these is keeping gutters clean so that water does not run down the side of the structure or gain entry. Ants are not stupid. Moist wood is much easier to chew. These ants do not eat the wood, but remove it to create galleries for their activities. The galleries run parallel to the grain, as they are created in the softer, non-lignin portions of the timber. The galleries have a sandpaper-like feel, due to fecal remnants, but the mud-tubes produced by termites will not be seen. With greater amounts of destruction, one can see sawdust-like piles accumulating below sites of activity.

Any wood in contact with the ground can be a source of entry, and water running toward the structure will also encourage these ants. Sloping the surrounding ground away from the structure will remedy this method of entry. Leaks inside the house from plumbing or appliances can also create the moist conditions that encourage these species.

One can spray the insects with common household insecticides to kill them, but this is unlikely to penetrate enough to reliably kill the colonies deep in the wood (or elsewhere!)

THE CRITICAL ELEMENT IN ANT CONTROL IS TO LOCATE THE NEST SO THAT IT CAN BE DESTROYED.

This can be done by following the foraging workers, who are generally females. Winged males leave the nest to reproduce, so there is little point in following them. They go in search of sunlight, so they are often seen near doors and windows (as exit points.) If winged ants are seen, there is a colony not far behind, so do not ignore this important warning sign. Structural damage can be intense by the time external damage is visible, such as sawdust or bubbling paint.

Various kinds of pesticide measures are now used, including granular chemicals, biologicals and soil poisoning. The latter is the least environmentally sound. The granular chemicals exploit the insects fondness for sweets. The granules are carried back to the nest, where the more slow-acting will eventually be fed to the queen. Mgrossmdjd 02:34, 12 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Respect for the Dead

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I have an ongoing study of these little hard workers, and I've noticed that not only do these ants carry off their dead comrades, they have also set up a "cemetery" where they dump their dead, it is close to the main entrance to their nest — Preceding unsigned comment added by 68.48.130.66 (talk) 18:54, 21 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Range?

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The article mentions their frequency as a pest in the US (this is also mentioned in the main Carpenter ant article) but neither article actually says anything about their range. Are they also major pests in any other countries? Ants don't have to go through Customs or carry citizenship papers, and they are unaware as far as humans know of national boundaries; and Wikipedia, even the English Wikipedia, is not a US-specific resource. It would be helpful to have something less US-ocentric and more broadly informative about their range, even though they clearly are not an endangered species or genus. --Haruo (talk) 19:04, 4 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]

I agree as I came in search of this article to learn their range. I was curious because I was looking for what ant breeds exist in Indiana where I came across this article[1]

While this article seems professional, it leaves out so much information where such information must be available. Armorbeast (talk) 09:47, 6 September 2018 (UTC)[reply]

References

  1. ^ "SPECIES OF ANTS IN INDIANA". Yespest.com. Retrieved 6 September 2018.

Critique on the Article-what behavioral categories is it missing?

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The Black Carpenter Ant or Camponotus pennsylvanicus entry gave great insight into the physical phenotypes that distinguish from the other members of the Carpenter Ant genus. I found it interesting there is a size polymorphism for the worker ants and differentiated worker castes, which could be related to one another. The entry is missing behavioral categories of mating behavior, worker behavior and nest construction. Mating behavior explanations are important because mating is an essential behavior to ensure individual genes are propagated. Mating behavior also is interconnected with so many other essential behaviors because gene propagation is the main goal for a species. The differentiate status of workers is mentioned, but no details are given into differentiated behaviors which are needed to characterize rearing and food gathering social behaviors. Lastly, by not including nest construction there is a lack of breeding traits that are included within both mating and rearing behaviors explanations. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Helenaxeros (talkcontribs) 23:39, 9 September 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Helenaxeros (talk) 19:41, 10 September 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Helenaxeros (talk) 19:44, 10 September 2015 (UTC)[reply]