Termite Control
Subterranean Termites Live in Colonies in the Soil
The Most Serious Threat Your Home May Face
No matter how your home is constructed, where it's located, or how old it is, it could be attacked by subterranean termites. They are a threat across 70 percent of the world and in every part of the United States except Alaska. They cause $2-3 billion worth of damage each year in the U.S. alone. They are in fact, the most serious threat your home may face.
The Subterranean Termite Colony
The termites most likely to attack your home are subterranean termites. All are social insects that live in large, underground colonies. Although they could number in the millions, you might never see them or any evidence of them - until you discover that they've done serious damage to your home.
Those "Ants" Might Be Termites
Like ants, subterranean termites live in the ground and often move in single file, but there are differences, and it's important to know them .Both ants and termites have two pairs of wings,
but ants' wings are different sizes while the termites' wings are all the same size. Ants have elbowed antennae while termites have short, straight antennae that resemble strings of beads. Don't be fooled by color or size. Ants can vary in size, and winged termites can be brown or black.

KING AND QUEEN: At least one king and queen are at the
center of every termite colony. The queen's sole purpose is
to reproduce. Some live
for as long as 30 years.

EGGS: Queens can lay thousands
of eggs every year. Eggs
hatch
into nymphs.

NYMPHS: While in the nymph state, termites diverge into different castes: workers, soldiers, reproductives, and supplementary reproductives.

WORKERS: Workers are blind, wingless termites that maintain the colony, build and repair the nest and tubes, forage for food, and care for the other termites. They are the most numerous caste and the most likely
to be found in infested wood.

SOLDIERS: Soldiers are sterile, wingless, and blind.
Their sole
function is to defend the colony.
Winged Reproductives
These termites will eventually leave the colony as adult Swarmers. After swarming, they shed their wings and pair up. Each male-female pair attempts to start a new colony.
Supplementary Reproductives:
These termites help increase the population of established colonies and can serve as replacements for the
king or queen if they should die.
Who's Coming To Dinner In Your Neck Of The Woods?
These are several common species of subterranean termites in the United States. Which one you're most likely to encounter depends largely on where you live. Here are the two most common species of termites and where they're usually found.
FORMOSAN SUBTERRANEAN
Southern half of continental U.S. and Hawaii; originally from mainland China.
- More vigorous, aggressive and successful than other termites.
- Maintain very large colonies (often in the millions) and can severely damage a structure in as little as three months.
- Most damaging during the least visible phase of their life cycle.
- Build hard nests called "cartons" within walls, which allow the thousands of termites inside to live indefinitely without soil contact.
- Can also attack and destroy healthy trees, and non-wood materials like plaster, plastic, asphalt, and even thin sheets of metal.
EASTERN SUBTERRANEAN
Most common termite in North America: throughout Eastern U.S. and as far west as Montana.
- Mature colony can contain from 20,000 to 5 million workers, averaging around 300,000. Queen will add 5,000 to 10,000 eggs annually.
- Single structure can often contain multiple colonies.
- Telltale signs include dirt-colored mud tubes and translucent wings shed by kings and queens.
- Average colony can consume 5 grams of wood per day.
- Can enter buildings through cracks less than 3/16" wide.
- Secondary colonies can exist above ground.
- Feed on cellulose materials including wood, paper, and cotton; occasionally even roots of shrubs and trees.
How Termites Get In
Once termites have discovered your house, they will search it for food – wood fiber. They will squeeze through cracks as narrow as the thickness of a sheet of paper. Expansion joints, foundation cracks, tiny gaps around plumbing, and electrical service entries are all opportunities for termites to enter your home. In homes with basements, they can enter where the floor and walls meet, and through small openings in the walls themselves.
- Are you inviting termites?
- The ABC's of termite management




