| Literature DB >> 24855592 |
Roxana Josens1, Francisco J Sola1, Nahuel Marchisio1, María Agostina Di Renzo1, Alina Giacometti1.
Abstract
Ant control is difficult in systems even where a variety of control strategies and compounds are allowed; in sensitive places such as hospitals, where there are often restrictions on the methods and toxicants to be applied, the challenge is even greater. Here we report the methods and results of how we faced this challenge of controlling ants in a pediatric hospital using baits. Our strategy was based on identifying the species present and analyzing their behavior. On the one hand, we evaluated outdoors in the green areas of the hospital, the relative abundance of ant genera, their food preferences and the behavioral dominances. On the other hand, control treatments were performed using separately two boron compounds added to sucrose solution which was not highly concentrated to avoid constrains due to the viscosity. Most of the species in the food preference test accepted sugary food; only one species was recorded to visit it less than the protein foods. This result was consistent with the efficacy of control treatments by sugary baits within the rooms. For species that showed good acceptance of sugar solutions in the preference test outdoors, sugar bait control indoors was 100& effective. Conversely, for the only species that foraged significantly less on sugar food, the bait treatment was ineffective. This work reveals the importance of considering the behavior and feeding preferences of the species to be controlled by toxic baits.Entities:
Keywords: Ant; Baits; Chemical control; Food preferences; Nylanderia fulva
Year: 2014 PMID: 24855592 PMCID: PMC4024480 DOI: 10.1186/2193-1801-3-229
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Figure 1Bait tubes arrangement. Sets of two tubes were used: one tube with Boric Acid (BA) and the other with Borax (B). The black arrow indicates the hole that the ants use to exit.
List of ant morphospecies detected in the hospital considering every sample method used: pitfall trapping, baits and manual sampling either inside the buildings or outside areas
| Subfamily | Species | Observations |
|---|---|---|
| Ponerinae |
| Extremely rare. Individual ants on the grass, no trails were observed. |
| Formicinae |
| Abundant presence. Very small species; usually enters through tiny gaps and cracks in buildings or nests therein. |
|
| Abundant presence. Very small species; usually enters through tiny gaps and cracks in buildings or nests therein. | |
|
| One of the most abundant species. Usually enter and nest in the buildings. Long trails alongside the outer walls of several pavilions. | |
|
| Extremely rare. Arboreal, associated with green areas | |
| Myrmicinae |
| Abundant in green areas. Not found associated to buildings. |
|
| Abundant in green areas but rarely found inside buildings. | |
|
| Not abundant in green areas. It was found nesting in one pavilion. | |
|
| Very small ants. They were found only on land and in the grass. | |
|
| Black leaf-cutting ants, the biggest in the hospital. Nests are in green areas and also associated to buildings. | |
|
| Very rare. Only in grass and trash. Very small ants. | |
|
| Small ants. They were only detected in one building. | |
| Dolichoderinae |
| Low abundance. In green areas. |
|
| Low abundance. In green areas. | |
| Pseudomyrmecinae |
| Low abundance. Arboreal, associated with green areas. |
Figure 2Relative abundances of ant genera in green areas of the hospital. Pitfall traps were placed in the green areas of the hospital and left for two days. 4,767 ants were collected and identified.
Visits and behavioral dominance at the bait stations
| Station | First genera to discover/recruit to baits | Time of | Time of Nf recruit. > 20 workers** | Species (&) at T7 (time = 70 m) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| T5 | T5 |
| (100&) |
|
|
| T4 | T6 |
| (97&) |
|
|
| -- | -- |
| (98&) |
|
|
| T7 | T7 |
| (43&); |
|
| (37&); | ||||
|
| (15&) | ||||
|
|
| T5 | T6 |
|
|
|
|
|
| -- |
|
|
|
|
|
| -- |
|
|
|
|
| T5 | -- |
| (55&); |
|
| (45&) | ||||
First genera to arrive at each station (STi), presence of Nylanderia fulva as the first time in which 3 (presence) and 20 (recruitment) workers were detected and behavioral dominance showed as the percentage of ant species present at the end of the recording (70 min, T7).
ST: Station; Nf: Nylanderia fulva; N.: Nylanderia; P.: Pheidole.
*; ** : First Time (from T0 to T7) at which N. fulva had at least 3 (*) or 20 (**) workers at the station.
--: There were no workers or did not reach the indicated number.
Figure 3Temporal dynamics of the species visiting bait stations offered in the green areas of the hospital. Eight stations were set during 70 minutes, offering meat, oil tuna, canned meat and honey-water. Species and number of ants per species were recorded every 10 minutes. Data showed are the 8 stations pooled for the 4 most numerous species visiting the baits: Pheidole sp2 (A), Pheidole acutiloba (B), Pheidole sp1 (C) and Nylanderia fulva (D). Note the different scales for each species.
Figure 4Preferences of each species among the four food baits offered. The 8 stations (Figure 3) and their times were pooled. For each species Goodness of fit tests were performed among food types. No letters in common among food types in each species means differences in the preference of worker visits.
Indoor sites treated with sugar toxic baits
| Site | Place details | Species | Nº of tubes: baits applied | Result + / - | Delay |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Individual Room 4, U5 |
| 1: BA | + | 5 |
| 2 | Individual Room 2, U5 |
| 1: BA | + | 13 |
| 3 | Individual Room 3, U5 |
| 1: BA | + | 13 |
| 4 | Office, U5 |
| 2: BA, B | + | 5 |
| 5 | Individual Room B, IC and office |
| 2: BA, B | + | 8 |
| 6 | Individual Room A IC |
| 2: BA, B | + | 8 |
| 6 | Individual Room A IC |
| 2: BA, B | - | (+32) |
| 7 | Resident physician’s Bathroom, U5 |
| 2: BA, B | - | (+30) |
| 8 | Office, U10 |
| 2: BA, B | + | 9 |
| 9 | Individual Room 4, U10 |
| 1: BA | + | 21 |
| 10 | Individual Room 10, U9 |
| 2: BA, B | + | 15 |
| 11 | Laboratory and office |
| 4: BA, B | + | 7 |
| 12 | General room and nurse office |
| 10: BA, B | + | 7 |
| 13 | Laundry room |
| 6: BA, B | + | 14 |
Keys: N.: Nylanderia; P.: Pheidole; B.: Brachymyrmex; A.: Acromyrmex; M.: Monomorium; BA: boric acid; B: borax.
Result +: ants were no longer detected. Result -: ants were still detected. Delay: Days until shown results.