The Ants of Singapore

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Tropical Household Ants: Pest Status, Species Diversity, Foraging Behaviour and Bating Studies

Publication Type:Conference Paper
Year of Publication:2002
Authors:C. W. Lee
Editor:Jones, S. C., Zhai J. Robinson Wm. H.
Conference Name:Proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Urban Pests
Date Published:2002
Abstract:

Questionnaire-based surveys of homeowners revealed that ants were the most economically important and abundant household pest after mosquitoes and cockroaches in Malaysia. Twenty-five species of ants were found indoors and outside buildings; all species nest outdoors except Monomorium pharaonis, Monomorium floricola, Tapinoma melanocephalum , and Solenopsis molesta . Surveys of houses and food stores indicated the most common species were Pheidole sp., T. melanocephalum, Monomorium destructor, and Paratrechina longicornis. A survey of homeowners’ attitudes and knowledge of ants showed that 62% found ants daily in their homes. Most respondents tolerated < 50 ants indoors; 65% used aerosol sprays for control, 6% used ant baits. Homeowners were not aware that ants can mechanically vector pathogenic organisms. Bacteria, fungi, and yeasts were isolated from ants collected from food outlets. Most ant species responded to peanut butter attractant, except P. longicornis and T. melanocephalum, which preferred honey. Attractancy to peanut butter and honey changed in an 18-month study of M. pharaonis. All species, except Pheidole sp. preferred liquid bait. Foraging of P. longicornis, M. pharaonis, and Solenopsis geminata was negatively correlated with temperature; their peak activity was 2-4 hours after sunset. Most baits gave >75% reduction after one week post-treatment.

Scratchpads developed and conceived by (alphabetical): Ed Baker, Katherine Bouton Alice Heaton Dimitris Koureas, Laurence Livermore, Dave Roberts, Simon Rycroft, Ben Scott, Vince Smith