White-ants Control in Australia
The destructive nature of white-ants in Australia
 
White-ants also called subterranean termites, are a highly destructive timber pest, causing major structural timber damage to domestic and commercial buildings in Australia.
Recent industry surveys suggest that about one third of all unprotected properties are subject to attack by white-ants. Severe white-ant damage to Australian homes is on the increase due to recent changes in the type of chemicals allowed to be used, building construction materials and designs that encourage hidden termite entry and infestation.
DESTRUCTIVE TERMITE RISK ASSESSMENT *
* Based upon CSIRO data and APCA national survey
White-Ants live in the ground and can eat your house down....
White-ants are known to destroy the wall and roofing timbers of a home within 3 months of construction.
White-ants cause more damage to homes in Australia than fire, floods, storms and tempest, combined.
Home insurance does NOT cover the repair costs of damage caused by white-ants to a home or commercial building.
White-ants occur throughout Australia, with a high incidence of attack in virtually all urban areas.

White-ants are small in size (about half the size of match-head) and soft bodied insects. White-ants build a central colony nest from which they construct underground tunnels that radiate in a 100 metre radius from a central colony nest in search of a timber (cellulose) food source.
white-ants can build a sub-nest in a wall cavity of a home
The picture on the left shows a white-ant inspector examining an above ground white-ant subsidiary nest built inside a wall cavity of a home.
White-ants often build such above ground nests, where moisture collects in the wall cavity, such as, from leaking pipes, shower recess or faulty guttering, etc.

White-Ants travel in mud shelter tubes...
The picture on the left shows a mud shelter tube that white-ants have constructed over a solid object, in this case, a brick foundation wall in the sub-floor of a cottage.
White-ants travel in these mud shelter tubes as protection from predators, sun-burn, dehydration and to maintain a high humidity environment which is essential for their survival.
White-ants are highly secretive, preferring to enter a building through areas inaccessible to inspection, such as, through in-fill patios, fire heaths, expansion joints and cracks in concrete slab (on-ground) flooring.
White-ants can pass through a 2 mm crack or an expansion joint (eating through the rubber compound) between adjoining concrete on ground flooring. White-ants can also travel under parquetry and floor tiles to get to the wall framing timbers.
 
White Ants symbiotic digestive system to destroy your home
 
Only the worker white-ant caste can digest timber by the use of symbiotic protozoa in their gut. Worker white-ants feed their partly digested semi-liquid food, regurgitated from their mouth or passing from their anus, to the other white-ants, a process known as trophallaxis.


White-ants have a well ordered social system with amazing engineering capabilities and an acute survival instinct; they obtain moisture from the soil and moist decaying timber, and communicate using pheromone signals.
The mutual feeding, constant grooming and close social habits of white-ants are used to advantage in modern white-ant control baiting systems.

Certain hi-tech white-ant baits recently introduced on the Australian market from the USA have a delayed lethal effect on white-ants which readily pass on the bait to other white-ants in the central colony nest during the mutual groomoing and feeding.


White-ants need to maintain a high level of humidity and temperature (25 to 35oC) in their central colony nest.
White-ants eat through the centre of susceptible timbers leaving nothing but a thin veneer of timber and/or paint. White-ants will pack mud in cracks and joints in timber to prevent loss of humidity and resultant dehydration.
 
The Biology of White-Ants or Subterranean Termites

 
Termites or "white ants" as they are often called are not ants at all. White-ants are in fact related to cockroaches with a similar two hundred million year history.
Within a white-ants nest there are members of different castes, each with a different role to perform. These include the queen, king, the winged reproductive (young kings and queens), soldiers and workers.


The King and Queen with worker white-ants

Close-up picture of worker white-ants

The queen following her hazardous flight and after mating becomes an egg laying machine; her body becomes hugely enlarged; she can live more than 25 years producing more that 2,000 eggs a day.

The king and queen live in a central chamber and are tended by the workers.

The workers are by far the largest cast in the White-ants colony and
white-ants
the one that does the damage; they are a creamy translucent colour, soft bodied and carry out all work in the nest, including gathering food (timber and other cellulose); constructing tunnels; repairing and enlarging the White-ants colony nest; grooming each other and feeding the soldiers, the king, queen and also caring for the young nymphs until mature.

Worker white-ants are 3 mm to 4 mm long, have no wings, are sterile and blind; work 24 hours a day for several years life span in some species.

The soldiers commonly have an orange coloured armoured head
white-ants
with mandibulate pinchers which they use to crush an attacker, such as ants; some have hard pointed snout which eject a white sticky latex to ensnare their enemies.

The soldier White-ants are usually the first to be seen in large numbers by the home owner when the termite workings (shelter tubes or damaged timber) are opened and the soldiers rush out to guard the opening whilst the worker White-ants repair the damage.

The swarmers (reproductives) are called "alates"
and are commonly seen when they swarm on a hot humid summer evening around dusk; they have eyes; are poor fliers but are swept along by the wind; they land, drop their wings, find a mate to become king and queen of a new White-ants colony.

The swarmers are emitted in their thousands when a mature White-ants nest is large and well established. They land , shed their wings and attract a mate by pheromone chemical signal. If you find swarming white-ants, it is a sure DANGER sign that a large White-ants colony nest is close by and thorough inspection of the property by a termite control expert is essential.
 
The Life Cycle of White-ants or Subterranean termites
 
Life Cycle - Subterranean white-ants

As noted above, white-ants constantly groom and feed each other. A valuable technique for the white-ant pest controller is to instal and monitor a White-ants baiting system next to any live activity found in and around the premises where White-ants are foraging, is most likely to occur. Subsequent inspections (preferably monthly) may reveal dead or sick worker white-ants, they change colour to a mottle look, and spread of the White-ants bait to other white-ants leading to elimination of the colony.
The termite baits are designed to be non-repellant to the white-ants and has a unique delayed effect. Time enough to be passed onto the other white-ants in the colony including the queen, with a sufficient dosage leading to the elimination of the entire White-ants colony. This process is explained in detail in the Termite Control section of this website.
 
The Main Destructive Species of White-Ants in Australia
 
It is essential for the white ant pest controller to properly identify the species of white ant found in a property. Some species of white ants prefer living and will not attack dry seasoned timbers in a building, whilst others can be are highly destructive to such buildings in a short amount of time.
Coptotermes acinaciformis

Commonly found throughout Australia
- particularly in urban areas or where eucalypt gum trees are highly prevalent.

Destructive Nature - Coptotermes acinaciformis are highly destructive to buildings and other timber structures. They are the most widely distributed and destructive timber pest in Australia, accounting for more than 70% of the serious damage to buildings in Australia. A single colony may consist of more than one million white ants. A most voracious timber pest ... one to be taken seriously.

Nest Location - Coptotermes acinaciformis are a very secretive white ant species; they build their nest out of sight, often within the base of eucalyptus or other susceptible trees, or completely under the ground; often within an enclosed patio or under concrete on ground flooring which is ideal for moisture retention, temperature and humidity control within the white ant colony's central nest. Coptotermes acinaciformis can also construct subsidiary White-ant nests away from the main colony nest. A subsidiary White-ant nest can be contained in a wall cavity of a building where there is a reliable moisture source, for example, from a leaking shower recess or faulty guttering or rusted down pipes.
Mastotermes darwiniensis

Area of Distribution - Commonly found in tropical Queensland, Northern Territory and Western Australia - generally north of the tropic of Capricorn.

Destructive nature - Mastotermes darwiniensis is one of the world's most destructive white ant species, often causing severe damage to houses, buildings, bridges, posts, poles, and many other plant and animal products. It is also an agricultural pest, responsible for ringbarking and killing living trees, shrubs, fruit, vegetable crops, sugarcane and rubber trees. It is reported to attack rubber tyres on tractors and cause damage to leather, hide, plastic or lead-sheathed cables, bitumen, bagged salt, flour, glass and various metals. Mastotermes darwiniensis is the most ancient of all the white ants in the world - they occur only in Australia - a white ant to be feared.

Nest location
- Mastotermes darwiniensis build their nest (secretively) totally below the soil surface; or in the trunks and root crowns of trees and stumps. Once a nest is mature (over 100,000 or much higher) they can 'split off' to form other nests over a wide ranging area. These sub nests are formed constantly and can sustain life for along period of time without contact to the original nest.
Schedorhinotermes intermedius

Area of Distribution - Commonly found in eastern NSW and south eastern Queensland - particularly along the entire coast-line, the Great Dividing Range and adjoining slopes.

Identification - this species tends to "gouge" the affected timber and has a fetish around nails used in construction. When you first find them, you will often see a major soldier (6mm in body length) and a minor soldier (4mm in body length).

Destructive Nature - Schedorhinotermes intermedius are highly destructive to buildings and other timber structures. If mostly major (larger) soldiers are sighted, then they will most likely be a large colony with the potential to cause severe and rapid damage to structural timbers of a building or other timber structures.

Nest Location - Schedorhinotermes intermedius commonly build their nest in tree stumps, in the root crown of the living, dead and debilitated trees, under houses or within enclosed patios or other areas where timber has been buried or stored in contact with the soil.
Coptotermes frenchi

Area of Distribution - Commonly found throughout NSW, ACT, Victoria and south eastern South Australia; particularly in urban areas, where buildings are constructed of softwood or oregon timber framing. This species is responsible for most of the timber pest damage to buildings in the ACT region.

Destructive Nature - Coptotermes frenchi can cause severe damage to buildings and other wooden structures. It is common for this species to devour timber framing leaving only a thin veneer. This species is the most shy of the destructive species; they will retreat from a location immediately (for the time being) if disturbed.

Nest Location - Coptotermes frenchi most often build their nest in the root crown or lower trunk area of living trees, particularly eucalypts. They may also build their nest as a mound in the dryer areas.
Nasutitermes exitiosus

Area of Distribution - Commonly found throughout NSW, ACT, Victoria and the southern areas of Queensland and Western Australia - particularly in urban areas or where eucalypt gum trees are highly prevalent.

Destructive Nature - Nasutitermes exitiosus are destructive to buildings and other timber structures. Sometimes severe damage may occur, but not so commonly as the other species listed above.

Nest Location - Nasutitermes exitiosus build a mound nest which protrudes 30cm to 75cm above the ground. Control can be as easy as knocking the top off the nest and a follow up insecticide treatment inside the nest.
Coptotermes lacteus

Area of Distribution - Commonly found in eastern NSW, the ACT, and the south eastern areas of Queensland including Brisbane and coastal region to Rockhampton - particularly prevalent along the entire coast-line, along the Great Dividing Range and western slopes.

Destructive Nature - Coptotermes lacteus attacks stumps, dead trees, timber fences, poles and other timber structures that are in contact with the soil, being softened by weathering or decay. These white ants are also known to attack such timber in damp sub-floor areas.

Nest Location - this white ant species, most often builds it's nest as a mound up to 2m above ground level, with hard clay walls, so control is easily effected once located by knocking the top off and insecticide treatment of the nest.
Nasutitermes walkeri

Area of Distribution - Commonly found in eastern NSW and south eastern Queensland - particularly prevalent in the coastal and mountain regions along the entire eastern side of NSW.

Destructive Nature - Nasutitermes walkeri can be destructive to damp timbers often a serious problem where the sub-floor of a building is damp and ventilation is poor with resulting wood decay or fungal growth.

Nest Location - Nasutitermes walkeri build their nest in trees on the main trunk or in the fork of a large branch.
Heterotermes ferox

Area of Distribution - Commonly found throughout NSW, the ACT, Victoria, and southern parts of South Australia and Western Australia - particularly in urban areas or where eucalypt gum trees are highly prevalent.

Destructive Nature - Heterotermes ferox are be destructive to damp timbers and are usually found attacking fences, poles and other timber structures subject to wood decay from weathering or from being in contact with the soil. This species is often confused with the more aggressive and destructive Coptotermes acinaciformis species. Correct identification is essential.

Nest Location - Heterotermes ferox often build their colony nest next to stumps, logs, or other timber in direct contact with the soil where some wood decay or rotting is prevalent.
Dampwood white ants - form small independent nests which often attack sick or dead trees, decaying stumps or mouldy timber in the ground; they are seldom found in dry timbers in buildings.
Drywood white ants - occur mostly in tropical areas, where the atmospheric humidity is constantly above 75 percent. The introduced and highly destructive West Indian drywood white ant, Cryptotermes brevis, is rarely located in NSW, once in Sydney in the early 1980's. Specialist eradication procedures involve wrapping the entire building in plastic and using methyl bromide fumigation.

If You find white-ants do NOT disturb them

White-ants have acute survival instincts. If severely shaken up or disturbed, the white-ants will abandon that area and move on to secretly cause damage in other areas in the building. If you find white-ants in or around your property, it is essential that you do NOT disturb them and promptly arrange for a professional inspection and application of a white ant / termite bait to live white-ants present.

White-Ants / Termites...
Mother Nature's most prolific builders

This picture shows a large above ground white-ants nest found in the Northern Territory of Australia. In cooler climates, most of the destructive white-ant species build their nest completely below ground level.

A large white-ant colony in an urban environment is most often unseen, being totally below ground level with a white-ant nest containing more than a million white-ants - secretly eating the inside of your timbers leaving you an empty shell.

Find Out How to Protect Your Property
Click on Termite Control
 
Learn about other common household pests

Ants Borers Silverfish
Bed Bugs Cockroaches Spiders
Bees Fleas Termites
Bird Control Rats & Mice Wasps

Find out how to protect Your Home from termites
termites termite control pest control consumer advice home