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SCIENTIFIC
NAME: Tapinoma sessile (Say)
CLASS/ORDER/FAMILY: Insecta/Hymenoptera/Formicidae
METAMORPHOSIS: Complete
INTRODUCTION:
The pungent, "rotten-coconutlike" odor given off when this ant is crushed
gives it its name. It is a native species and is found throughout the United
States.
RECOGNITION:
Workers monomorphic, about 1/16-1/8" (2.4-3.25 mm) long. Body brown to black.
Antenna 12-segmented, without a club. Thorax lacks spines, profile unevenly
rounded. Pedicel 1-segmented, with small node/segment hidden/concealed from
view from above by base of gaster. Gaster with anal opening slitlike, lacking
circlet of hairs. Stinger absent. Workers emit a disagreeable, rotten,
coconut-like odor.
SIMILAR GROUPS:
(1) Ghost ant (Tapinoma melanocephalum) with head and thorax dark but abdomen
and legs pale. (2) Argentine (Iridomyrmex humilis), crazy (Paratrechina
longicornis), pyramid (Conomyrma insana), and dark field (Formica spp.) ants
have node visible, not hidden by gaster; in addition, pyramid ants with thorax
with single tooth on upper surface, field and crazy ants with circular anal
opening surrounded by circlet of hairs and crazy ants additionally with
antenna! scape (1st segment) at least twice head length and very long legs in
relation to body size. (3) Other small dark ants have 2-segmented pedicel
and/or lack rotten coconut odor when crushed.
BIOLOGY:
Colonies may be composed of several hundred to 100,000 ants. There are usually
many queens in a colony. Developmental time (egg to adult) is 34-83 days,
varying with temperature during summer months, and up to 6-7 months during the
winter. Colonies typically produce 4-5 generations a year. Although they
probably mate both inside and outside the nest, the first swarmers appear from
May to mid-July. The workers and queens live for several years. Individuals
from different colonies are not hostile to one another and workers normally
move along trails.
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HABITS:
Inside, these ants usually construct their nests in wall voids especially
around hot water pipes and heaters, in crevices around sinks, cupboards, etc.
These ants prefer sweets but also eat foods with high protein content and
grease such as meats and cheese.
Outside, they are often found in the nest of larger ants, in exposed soil,
but mostly under objects. Workers feed on insects, seek honeydew and plant
secretions, and even feed on seeds. They are extremely fond of honeydew and
attend such honeydew-excreting insects as plantlice (aphids), scale insects,
mealybugs, etc. They are most likely to enter buildings when their honeydew
supply is reduced such as during rainy weather or with leaf fall in the
autumn.
When workers are alarmed, they run around in an erratic manner with their
gasters/abdomens raised up.
CONTROL:
Location of the nest(s) is crucial and can often be accomplished by following
the trail of foraging workers back from the food source. Use of boric acid
dust in the voids of outside ground-floor walls and infested interior walls
along with barrier treatment is effective. Baiting is often required.

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