Fire Ant Control Protocol

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Basics

  • Check Fire Ant Distribution chart to see if this is relevant
  • User: Eric here, in Florida we have a PILE of them so I’m making this page just to document what all i know/have dug up

Protocol

  • Survey the site and place Marking Flags on all the ant hills
  • At the same time some sort of pesticide can be applied, or an alternative treatment used
  • Then wait a few days (need to double check the different pesticide options and time until they should have worked+plug info in here)
  • Continue to check and reapply as needed
  • Upon the anthill being confirmed “dead”, Disturb/Fill in the hill and remove the flag

Further Research Needed

  • Pesricide Options (Mainly to seek low-bio persistent options and/or options that would be easily made in a biorefinery (preferably without Fluorine Compounds etc)
  • Gathering Information on Alternate Treatments
  • Seemingly Promising Options are:
    • Drenching in a Detergent-Water Mixture
      • Gets past their wax coating, and disturbs surface tension thus preventing them from floating away
    • Dry Ice or Liquid Nitrogen
  • How far Fire Ant Populations move over a given period of time, aids in Routine Maintenance Scheduling or potentially even Eradication Efforts in areas where they are an Invasive Species

Disproven Methods

Grits as a Pesticide

  • User: Eric Here, at a community garden i did some work with, in attempting to be all ‘’organic’’ (Notably ‘’’Without’’’ the research/intent behind Integrated Pest Management / Permaculture , GRANTED their hearts were in the right place but yeah) they tried this
  • The rationale is that grits swell when wetted so they would do this inside the ant after being eaten whole
  • What ‘’actually’’ happens is you essentially feed the ants
  • A YouTube Channel Actually Tested this in an ant farm:

Internal Links

External Links