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Common
Pests
Termites
Subterranean
are commonly known as white ants. However they are distinctly difference
from ants in their lifestyle and appearance.
In nature, termites have an important role in recycling rotten timber
in the forest and returning nutrients to the soil. When they get into
our homes they are then declared pests and the damage they can cause to
a home is substantial.
Termites are social insects and have a caste structure which differentiates
workers from soldiers and reproductives.
The reproductives, when sexually mature, are winged. In the warmer more
humid months they swarm and can often be seen in early evening flying
out of bushland to colonise new areas, sometimes your home. The Queen
lays eggs and once the nest is established, does nothing else. The Queen
of a large, mature colony can lay up to 2000 eggs per day. These eggs
develop into workers, soldiers and reproductives.
The workers are the ones who do all the damage. They are wingless, blind
and sterile and are responsible for foraging for food, constructing tunnels,
building the nest and feeding the other members of the colony. They feed
on wood and other cellulose materials, but have a preference for some
timbers over others. As they feed they may hollow out timbers and often
move from one area to another by constructing small tunnels made from
a mud-like combination of faeces and saliva over non-susceptible materials.
They make these tunnels to protect themselves from predators and from
the heat, light and lack of humidity in the outside environment. The soldiers
are responsible for the protection of the nest and in some species have
a pair of mandibles on their head to attack predators. Termites can travel
long distances to find food. The nest may be fifty metres away from where
the workers are foraging.
They can work their way into a house from under the floor, up the wall
cavity, alongside plumbing penetrations or through construction joints
in the concrete.
The pest management of termites includes an inspection by an experienced
technician, eradication of any existing termite infestation and protection
through the application of a barrier system to impede and discourage the
concealed entry of termites into your home.
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