These 5 simple steps will help keep ants from marching into your home
Ants make for terrible houseguests: They come uninvited, get into
everything, and are in no hurry to leave. Through the warmer months, the
two types most likely to show up are carpenter ants and odorous house
ants, aka house ants. When their natural habitat is destroyed, ants seek
out alternate food sources, which is what brings them indoors.
[post_ads]“The problem is they can really proliferate,” says Jody
Gangloff-Kauffman, an entomologist and the director of the Integrated
Pest Management Program at Cornell University. “By the time you start
spotting them inside your house, you may already have hundreds.”
According to Gangloff-Kauffman, house ants—typically less than
1⁄8-inch long—are the most common ant species to invade your house. “The
good news is that they’re really considered a nuisance pest,” she says.
So while house ants may show up on your kitchen counters or around the
shower, they won’t transmit disease or cause any real damage to your
home.
“I’d argue that insect barrier sprays are both ineffective against
ants and complete overkill,” says CR’s Hansen. “Worse, some of these
sprays contain chemicals that are endocrine-disrupting compounds, which
can alter our hormones. Similar compounds have been linked to
neurobehavioral effects in children, including reduced IQ and increased
rates of ADHD, even at the low levels you’d be exposed to when spraying
your house.”
Instead, if you spot a few ants here and there, kill them the
old-fashioned way: with a good stomp. They may be scouts, after all, so
getting rid of them early means they can’t come back with
reinforcements.
An odorous house ant, left, and a carpenter ant. |
The same can’t be said of
carpenter ants, which feed on rotten or damp wood, potentially damaging
windows, doors, or even structural framing in the process. Carpenter
ants are about 1⁄4- to 1⁄2-inch long.
But think twice before you grab a can of bug spray and start crop-dusting your kitchen countertops.
“Ant poison may make you feel like you’re accomplishing something,
but you’re not,” says CR senior scientist Michael Hansen, Ph.D., a
biologist and ecologist who wrote his doctoral thesis on integrated pest
management. “Unless you solve the problem of what’s attracting them to
your house—and how they’re getting in—you should remember that there are
thousands of ants in every colony, and you’ll just keep seeing them.”
With that pleasant thought in mind, here are five tips from our go-to
experts in pest management on how to get ants out of your house—and
keep them out.
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1. Keep Your House Clean
Ants feed on sugar, protein,
and just about anything else they can find. “Generally, a colony will
send out a few ants to scout—they’ll bring back a sampling of any food
they find to the colony, and hundreds will follow them back into the
house,” Gangloff-Kauffman says. “And in my experience, they particularly
gravitate towards sugary liquids.”
To keep scouts from returning with hundreds of their friends in tow,
quickly clean up spills, particularly things like honey, maple syrup,
and soda. And keep all food in airtight containers.
2. Eliminate Damp Spots and Rotted Wood
“While house and carpenter
ants generally form a primary colony outdoors, they’ll sometimes build
satellite colonies inside a home to serve as a conduit for resources,”
Gangloff-Kauffman says. “And both species prefer damp areas.” That means
showers, windows, and damp areas in the basement all need extra
attention.
Look for leaks, fix them quickly, and replace any water-damaged
materials. “Unlike termites, which eat their way through new or old
wood, carpenter ants will only tunnel through wood that’s already been
damaged by water,” Gangloff-Kauffman says.
3. Set Ant Baits
[post_ads]“The most effective method
for controlling an ant infestation is using ant baits—set them out
anywhere you see ants and expect a party,” Gangloff-Kauffman says. “If
you still see ants around the house, try a few different brands of baits
until you find one that’s appealing to this particular colony.”
In addition to killing off any ants that feed on the sweet, sugary bait syrup, when scouts track the liquid back to the colony it kills larvae and helps control the population.
In addition to killing off any ants that feed on the sweet, sugary bait syrup, when scouts track the liquid back to the colony it kills larvae and helps control the population.
4. Make the Outdoors Appealing
Ants provide an important
ecological function by aerating soil and providing a source of food for
birds, according to Gangloff-Kauffman. To keep them outdoors, consider
the food sources outside the house. “Aphids, which are little insects
that live on plants, excrete honeydew, a sweet substance left on
plants,” she says. “Ants feed on that honeydew, but if a landscaper or
homeowner sprays outdoor plants for aphids, they’re also killing off an
outdoor food source for ants.”
That has the potential to drive them into your house in search of new
sources of nutrients. Indoor houseplants, particularly tropical
varieties, are very appealing to ants. Aphids that feed on indoor plants
excrete honeydew, too, which resembles white scale on leaves. Wipe
leaves clean to eliminate the food source for ants, and consider placing
aphid-killing plant spikes in the soil of any houseplants.
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5. Stay Away From Sprays
You might be tempted to apply a bug barrier spray around the foundation of your home to discourage entry, but Consumer Reports experts don’t recommend it. For starters, the spray wears off and addresses only one potential source of entry for ants. But there’s even more to our advice.Paul Hope
As
a classically trained chef and an enthusiast DIYer, I've always valued
having the best tool for a job—whether the task at hand is dicing onions
for mirepoix or hanging drywall. When I'm not writing about home
products, I can be found putting them to the test, often with help from
my two young children, in the 1860s townhouse I'm restoring in my free
time.