A name given to any of a number of species of ants in
recognition of their painful, burning stings. They are a variety of stinging ants with over 285 species worldwide with several
common names, including ginger ants,
tropical fire ants, and red ants. Fire
ants use their venom for defense, to kill prey, and as an aerosol disinfectant
against bacteria and fungi in the nest. When stung, mammals develop blisters,
which may become secondarily infected. Some people are dangerously allergic to
the ant’s venom.
Colonies of fire ants can cause significant economic and
ecological losses. Although individual ants are small, 3 to 6 mm (0.1 to 0.25
in) in length, mature colonies may have more than 200,000 workers, and they
build sizable mounds. In clay soils, fire ant mounds may be more than 60 cm (24
in) high and very hard, impeding agricultural operations and creating a hazard
for farming machinery. Fire ants can also undermine roadbeds and damage
electrical equipment — they are attracted by electrical fields. They also
destroy native fauna, especially other ants, egg-laying reptiles, and birds.
Most fire ants are indigenous to North and South America,
inhabiting an area from the southern United States to central Argentina. Six
species live in the United States. Of these, four are native, including the
native fire ant and the southern fire ant. The other two species—the black
imported fire ant and the red imported fire ant — were accidentally
transplanted in 1920 and 1940, probably from Brazil or Argentina. These
imported fire ants now infest more than 100 million hectares (250 million
acres) in nine southeastern states and Puerto Rico. In turn, the native fire
ant, indigenous from Texas to Florida and throughout the Caribbean, was
accidentally exported and now infests India, Taiwan, the Malay Archipelago,
parts of Africa, and many Polynesian islands.
Fire ants are members of the family Formicidae. The native
fire ant is classified as Solenopsis geminata, the southern fire ant as
Solenopsis xyloni, the black imported fire ant as Solenopsis richteri, and the
red imported fire ant as Solenopsis invicta. (Adapted from Encarta Encyclopedia
and Wikipedia Encyclopedia)