Invasive “crazy ants” are displacing fire ants in areas across the 
southeastern United States, according to researchers at The University 
of Texas at Austin. It’s the latest in a history of ant invasions from 
the southern hemisphere and may prove to have dramatic effects on the 
ecosystem of the region.
The “ecologically dominant” crazy ants are reducing diversity and 
abundance across a range of ant and arthropod species — but their spread
 can be limited if people are careful not to transport them 
inadvertently, according to Ed LeBrun, a research associate with the 
Texas invasive species research program at the Brackenridge Field 
Laboratory in the College of Natural Sciences
The study by LeBrun and his colleagues was published in Biological Invasions.
“When you talk to folks who live in the invaded areas, they tell you 
they want their fire ants back,” said LeBrun. “Fire ants are in many 
ways very polite. They live in your yard. They form mounds and stay 
there, and they only interact with you if you step on their mound.”
LeBrun said that crazy ants, by contrast, “go everywhere.” They 
invade people’s homes, nest in crawl spaces and walls, become incredibly
 abundant and damage electrical equipment.
Read the whole crazy invasive ant story  HERE


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