Ants
Re: Ants
How to Get Rid of Ants Naturally
http://www.wikihow.com/Get-Rid-of-Ants-Naturally
With over 12,000 species of ants in the world,[1] only a small handful of them insist on invading our homes in search of something tasty from either the sweet foods or flesh and greasy foods.[2] Ants commonly found indoors include the Argentine ant, the pharaoh ant, the thief or grease ant, the pavement ant and the odorous house ant.[3] And if you're really unlucky, you might have the carpenter ant, an ant insistent on destroying the wood that holds up your house, so get professional help fast in that case!
However, it would be unbalanced to see ants as bad on the whole. Most of the things ants do are good for us and the environment, including eating the larvae of fleas, spiders, bed bugs, flies, silverfish and clothes moths.[4] From that point of view, aiming to control them and prevent them from accessing your food is a better approach than seeking to completely eliminate them and natural approaches are best for this purpose. For the ants you need to control, there are some very easy, natural and effective natural methods to either ward off or remove ants from your home areas. ---CONTINUED---
Re: Ants
Kill Ants… Organically
10 Ways To Kill Ants… Organically
http://www.shtfpreparedness.com/10-ways-to-kill-ants-organically/
1. Baking soda is . . . .
2. Flour & Baby . . . .
3. You can use coffee . . . .
4. Grits, instant rice & . . . .
5. Fill a spray bottle with . . . .
6. Mix together one-third cup of . . . .
7. Fold contact paper in half, with . . . .
8. Cut off the bottom of a . . . .
9. Mix one cup of borax . . . .
10. Damascus Earth is . . . . --- CONTINUED at LINK, above with FULL List ---
10 Ways To Kill Ants… Organically
http://www.shtfpreparedness.com/10-ways-to-kill-ants-organically/
1. Baking soda is . . . .
2. Flour & Baby . . . .
3. You can use coffee . . . .
4. Grits, instant rice & . . . .
5. Fill a spray bottle with . . . .
6. Mix together one-third cup of . . . .
7. Fold contact paper in half, with . . . .
8. Cut off the bottom of a . . . .
9. Mix one cup of borax . . . .
10. Damascus Earth is . . . . --- CONTINUED at LINK, above with FULL List ---
Re: Ants
Ants-General Information
Ants
http://www.the-piedpiper.co.uk/th3.htm
Ants can be found almost everywhere, except probably at the polar caps, but you never know there may be a species of Eskimo Ant. Anyway, there are something like 15,000 known species of ant which have been described, and these are adapted for widely varying conditions. Common to them all, however, is the fact fact that they are all social. Technically speaking, they all belong to the Superfamily Formicidea of the order Hymenoptera and there are about 47 British species.
The winged ants which everybody raves about in summer are just normal ants which grow wings for what is known as the nuptial flight. This is where the young queens are fertilised, as soon as this has happened the queen breaks off her wings by biting them and becomes your normal ant again being ready to start her own nest where she can continue to lay eggs for up to 15 years, the males usually die soon after mating. Next time you're in your garden, have a good look at an ant. You will notice that they have a very narrow waist, this is known as the pedicel and can have one or two segments depending on the species. The sting is only normally present in species which have the double segmented pedicel. They also have elbowed (bent) antennae
There are carnivorous, herbivorous and omnivorous species, but in a lot of species their favourite food is honeydew, which they milk from Aphids, which has a high sugar content. When an ant finds a food source it will lay a pheromone(scent) trail back to the nest, where it will communicate with other workers by tapping antennae and also giving some of the food from it's crop, these workers in turn will then be able to locate the food. So when you spill sugar or a sticky drink in your kitchen or living room now you know why suddenly there's lots of ants about. ---CONTINUED---
Includes:
Ants
http://www.the-piedpiper.co.uk/th3.htm
Ants can be found almost everywhere, except probably at the polar caps, but you never know there may be a species of Eskimo Ant. Anyway, there are something like 15,000 known species of ant which have been described, and these are adapted for widely varying conditions. Common to them all, however, is the fact fact that they are all social. Technically speaking, they all belong to the Superfamily Formicidea of the order Hymenoptera and there are about 47 British species.
The winged ants which everybody raves about in summer are just normal ants which grow wings for what is known as the nuptial flight. This is where the young queens are fertilised, as soon as this has happened the queen breaks off her wings by biting them and becomes your normal ant again being ready to start her own nest where she can continue to lay eggs for up to 15 years, the males usually die soon after mating. Next time you're in your garden, have a good look at an ant. You will notice that they have a very narrow waist, this is known as the pedicel and can have one or two segments depending on the species. The sting is only normally present in species which have the double segmented pedicel. They also have elbowed (bent) antennae
There are carnivorous, herbivorous and omnivorous species, but in a lot of species their favourite food is honeydew, which they milk from Aphids, which has a high sugar content. When an ant finds a food source it will lay a pheromone(scent) trail back to the nest, where it will communicate with other workers by tapping antennae and also giving some of the food from it's crop, these workers in turn will then be able to locate the food. So when you spill sugar or a sticky drink in your kitchen or living room now you know why suddenly there's lots of ants about. ---CONTINUED---
Includes:
- Black Ant
- Red Ant
- Argentine Ant
- Pharoahs Ant
- Wood Ant
- Carpenters Ants