Main Menu
  • HOME
  • Residential
  • COMMERCIAL
  • PESTS
  • MSDS/LABELS
  • LINKS
  • CONTACT US
The Pests
  • See All Pests
  • Ants - Argentine
  • Ants - Carpenter
  • Ants - Fire
  • Ants - Odorous
  • Bed Bugs
  • Bees
  • Box Elder
  • Centipede
  • Cockroach -American
  • Cockroach - German
  • Cockroach - Oriental
  • Cricket
  • Earwig
  • Flea
  • Millipede
  • Mouse
  • Mud Dauber
  • Spider - Black Widow
  • Spider - Fiddleback
  • Spider - Jumping
  • Spider - Wolf
  • Wasps
Home » Pests » Carpenter Ant

Carpenter Ant

Identification

Carpenter ants are large (.25 to 1 in/0.63 to 2.5 cm) ants indigenous to many parts of the world. They prefer dead, damp wood in which to build nests. They do not eat it, however, unlike termites. Sometimes carpenter ants will hollow out sections of trees. The most likely species to be infesting a house in the United States is the black carpenter ant (Camponotus pennsylvanicus). However, there are over a thousand other species in the genus Camponotus.

Habitat

Carpenter ant species reside both outdoors and indoors in moist, decaying or hollow wood. They cut "galleries" into the wood grain to provide passageways for movement from section to section of the nest. Certain parts of a house, such as around and under windows, roof eaves, decks and porches, are more likely to be infested by Carpenter Ants because these areas are most vulnerable to moisture.

As Pests

Carpenter ants can damage wood used in the construction of buildings. They can leave behind a sawdust-like material called frass that provides clues to their nesting location. Carpenter ant galleries are smooth and very different from termite-damaged areas, which have mud packed into the hollowed-out areas.

Carpenter Ant
Carpenter Ant
Carpenter Ant
Carpenter Ant
  • W3C XHTML 1.0 Strict Validator Passed
  • W3C CSS 2.1 Validator Passed
Abide Pest Control - Copyright © 2011 - All Rights Reserved
  • SITE MAP
  • Site Design By:RDW DESIGN