An article from the Wall Street Journal that was just sent to all city 
employees in League City, where it turns out we have a problem with "crazy 
ants".  I had never heard of them until now.  And they are starting to show up 
in San Antonio and other cave areas of the hill country....
_________________________

'Crazy Ants' Get Under Skin of Gulf Coast Residents 

SEPTEMBER 5, 2009
PEARLAND, Texas -- Swarms of foreign "crazy ants" are spreading through Texas 
and Florida, raising alarms that the tiny, frenetic bugs will rival the fire 
ants that have ravaged the South, costing billions of dollars in damages each 
year.
Although the new pests don't pack the powerful sting of fire ants, scientists 
say they can do as much damage, killing wildlife and shorting out electrical 
equipment. Crazy ants have an additional trait that is proving especially 
irksome: They like to hang out where people live and are difficult to dislodge 
once they get inside buildings.






View Slideshow

Eric Kayne for The Wall Street Journal 
"Crazy ants" swarm exterminator Tom Rasberry's hands in a Pearland, Texas, 
field with a heavy infestation.








Called crazy ants because they scramble in all directions rather than trudging 
along a straight track, the ants carpet the ground and swarm over anything in 
their way -- plants, animals or humans. Scientists think the ants originated in 
the Caribbean.



The bugs, technically known as paratrechina species near pubens, form 
multiqueen supercolonies and breed by the millions, especially during the 
summer. They have now spread to 14 Texas counties, mostly around Houston, but 
have been found in three new spots this summer, including San Antonio 200 miles 
to the west.


In Florida, similar insects are known as Caribbean crazy ants (paratrechina 
pubens), and they have been spreading rapidly for about five years, said 
Roberto M. Pereira, associate research scientist at the University of Florida.
In Texas, the bugs are known as Rasberry crazy ants, after Tom Rasberry, an 
exterminator in this Houston suburb who has been warning about the new ants 
since he first found them in 2002. They "pose a clear and present danger to our 
way of life," he warns on a blog he devotes to the bugs 
(http://crazyrasberryants.blogspot.com/).


Across south Texas, the insects have been shorting out electrical sockets, air 
conditioners and, at Cindy Fitch's house in Pearland, the transformer that 
controls her floodlights. She has replaced it three times in the past two years.
"I always thought they were just a nuisance," she said recently outside her 
two-story home, "but now I've found they tear stuff up."



The Port of Houston now gets weekly pest-control visits to control the ants, 
which damaged backup power equipment there about a year ago, spokesman Edwin 
Henry said.


Eradicating the bugs is difficult, experts say, partly because they move their 
nests the minute anyone disturbs them. No baits -- poisons that insects carry 
into their colonies -- have yet been formulated specifically for these ants, 
which eat everything from hotdogs to honey, but don't like fire-ant bait. They 
do, however, eat fire ants.


Termidor, which chemical titan BASF AG originally developed for termites, is 
government-approved for keeping the ants at bay, but it must be applied by 
professional exterminators at a cost of hundreds or even thousands of dollars.
Over-the-counter pesticide sprays leave piles of dried corpses that look like 
drifts of brown sand, but still barely dent the ants' numerous populations.



Mounds of dead ants were piled up by a back door of the First Presbyterian 
Church in Pearland last week when Mr. Rasberry was called in. Now the church is 
facing thousands of dollars of extermination costs, said Rev. Winfield Jones.
Last year, Mr. Jones said, he spent $300 on chemicals just to keep circling 
ants out of his nearby house. "They reminded me of the children of Israel, 
marching around Jericho," he said.


The ants live happily in human environments, said Dr. Roger Gold, head of the 
urban entomology program at Texas A&M, noting that people are responsible for 
much of the ants' spread, transporting them in objects such as potted plants.
He and other scientists are eager to study the ants more, but funding has been 
hard to come by. So far, much of the limited research available has been done 
by Dr. Gold's graduate students.


One of them, Jason Meyers, now works as a market-development specialist at 
BASF. He said the Texas ants act like those that infested Colombia a decade 
ago, asphyxiating chickens and causing farmers to flee.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture has agreed to pay $30,000 to study new 
sightings of the insects in Texas.
Several Texas beekeepers reported in August that the ants were killing their 
hives. "It's not spread out far enough to where the industry is abuzz about 
this problem -- but it will be," said Jerry Stroope of Pearland, who has about 
2,000 hives.
The Texas Department of Agriculture is surveying other beekeepers, said Bryan 
Black, a spokesman for the agency, which organized a task force on the ants 
with the USDA last November.



Mr. Rasberry, who serves on the task force, said its only accomplishment so far 
has been to put out a brochure. He's lobbying government officials for 
more-aggressive action.
"It's in my best interest for these things to spread everywhere," said Mr. 
Rasberry, who notes they have been good for his exterminator business. "But I 
was born and raised in Texas, and I have a real concern about the impact these 
critters could have on our state."


Write to Leslie Eaton at leslie.ea...@wsj.com 

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