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Fire Ant Disease
Thelohania fire ant disease
Fire ant disease weakens fire ant colonies and results in 60 percent fewer ants per acre.
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Researchers place infected larvae on the fire ant mound. Ants adopt and raise infected larvae. The disease spreads to workers and the queen. |
In the queen, the disease multiplies, causing the abdomen to shrink. This is a healthy queen, left, and a diseased queen, right. |
Diseased queens have dark cysts in their ovaries and produce 90 percent fewer eggs. These queens are dissected to show healthy ovaries, left, and diseased ovaries, right. |

The few eggs the queen produces are diseased. Only a few larvae and workers develop. The workers in the healthy colony, left, greatly outnumber workers in the diseased colony. |
A diseased, weak, colony cannot defend itself. Stronger, raiding colonies, left, carry off and adopt the diseased larvae.
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Strong colonies which produce many winged ants, left, eventually become diseased and weak, producing only a few winged ants, so ant infestations do not spread. |
Areawide cooperators have successfully established Thelohania solenopsae throughout the imported fire ants' range within the United States.
Areawide Suppression of Fire Ants main menu
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Last Modified: 03/19/2007
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