Termites:
One really big happy family.
Like people, termites are social creatures that look out for their own. Unlike most people however, they really will eat you out of house and home.
Termites live with several hundred to several million family members, all of whom work together in an organized system to find and use cellulose food sources to grow the colony. This cooperation is called "swarm intelligence"and it helps explain why termites are so successful.
As you can see from the picture above, a termite colony can be attacking multiple homes from a single nest
A typical colony includes these specialized members:
Only worker termites can chew and digest cellulose. So, along with gathering food, they have to digest and regurgitate it for everyone else.
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Most termites are workers, with soft,
light-colored bodies rarely more than 10 mm long,
like grains of rice. They rarely leave the dark
tunnels that run from the colony through the soil
and into the wooden frames of buildings.
Twenty-four hours a day, they forage for food,
maintain the nest, and tend the queen and her
brood. Juveniles, called nymphs, groom and feed
one another and others in the colony.
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Soldiers have long heads with powerful jaws and are responsible for defense, primarily against invading ants. |
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Reproductive male and female termites develop wings and leave the parent colony in a swarm to mate and start new colonies. |
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The queen is the largest colony member, up to 10 cm long, about the size of the space bar on your computer. She's so big that if she needs to move, it requires several hundred workers pushing at once. She lays an egg every 15 seconds and can live up to 25 years!. |
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Termites keep themselves so well hidden that your best chance to see one is during a reproductive swarm. Problem is, swarming termites look a lot like swarming ants. Here's how to tell which insect you're looking at: |
- Wings: On ants, the front pair is longer than the back and they don't break off easily. On termites, they're equal size and they do break off easily.
- Waists: Ants are narrow and pinched. Termites are thicker and less defined.
- Antennae: Ants are elbowed. Termites are straight.
Now you know what the enemy looks
like and how its troops are organized. That'll help
you and your cellulose-rich real estate take a
stand against swarm intelligence.
But don't do it alone. Call in your special
forces!
