Bug Bites: Carpenter Ants in Trees
We have taken numerous calls about carpenter Ant nests in trees. Carpenter
ants normally do not need to be controlled in trees because they usually
cause little or no damage to the tree.
Carpenter ants vary in size and color. The black carpenter ant is probably
the most common species in landscapes. Worker ants are non-reproducing
females that are wingless and black. Workers come in two size ranges.
Minor workers are approximately 1/4 inch long and do much of the food
foraging, nest construction and larval feeding; they also attend the
queen. Major workers are also wingless and black, but are about 1/2
inch long and play a major role in defending the nest and minor workers.
The black carpenter ant is the only carpenter ant in Illinois that
commonly locates its nests in buildings. They tunnel out wood that is
damp or decaying from roof or water – pipe leaks. (The red carpenter
ant is another common species; with red, wingless workers that are about
inch long. Other, smaller species of carpenter ants are also found in
Illinois).
Carpenter ants build their nests by hollowing out rotting wood; they
do not eat the wood. Workers take mouthful-sized chips of wood to the
nest entrance, where they deposit the chips. This results in a pile
of coarse sawdust at the base of a tree. The nest itself consists of
meandering, 1/4 inch diameter tunnels that are free of sawdust. Egg
laying, larval rearing and pupation take place within these tunnels.
Nests may be present in rotting wood in trunks, limbs or roots.
Nests that are at least five years old will contain winged reproductives.
Black carpenter ant males are 1/4 inch long and have two pairs of clear
wings. The queens are approximately 3/4 inch long and also have two
pairs of clear wings. Both sexes emerge from the colony in early morning
and fly towards the light to escape the colony. Mating occurs and the
reproductives break their wings off at weakened spots. Then they tunnel
into damp, rotting wood to start a new colony.
Carpenter ant nests in trees are an indication of rotting wood. Such
trees should be checked to determine whether the rot has weakened the
tree enough that it becomes a hazard. Nests in trees close to as house
may result in ants entering the house to forage. This nuisance can be
eliminated by spraying an insecticide into the nest or by pruning overhanging
limbs at least three feet back from the roof. Otherwise, carpenter ant
nests do not directly weaken the tree and do not usually require control.
Author: Philip Nixon, University of Illinois Extension
Summer
2003
Hort Shorts | Hort
Tips | Did You Know… | Did
Winter Kill My Trees? | Unlocking the Medicinal
Secrets in Plants | Herb of the Year 2003: Basil
| Bug Bites: Carpenter Ants in Trees | Cybergarden
Sites | Lawn Care Calendar | Tomatoes:
Can, Freeze or Dry | Fruits With Bad Seeds
| Trans Fat on the Food Label | Health
& Household Tips
Index
| Feedback
