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  2. How To Get Rid Of Ants In Your House Once And For All - AOL

    www.aol.com/rid-ants-house-once-192639861.html

    “Maybe you’ll kill a hundred, but that’s the tip of the iceberg,” says Benson. “There’s a whole colony, including the queen and babies, that you haven’t touched.”

  3. How To Get Rid of Ants From Your Home With 4 Simple Tricks - AOL

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    A four-pronged approach — clean, spray, bait, and seal — helped me get rid of an ant infestation. Skip to main content. 24/7 Help. For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 ...

  4. Here's How to Get Rid of Ants in Your Home and Yard for Good

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/rid-ants-home-good...

    Ants are 'edge-followers' and will trail along the edges of sidewalks or countertops, so eliminate any vegetation that touches the structure and gives them easy access to your home,” says Suiter.

  5. Longhorn crazy ant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Longhorn_crazy_ant

    The longhorn crazy ant is able to invade new habitats and outcompete other species of ants. In 1991, in the large closed dome of the research station Biosphere 2 in the Arizona Desert, no particular ant species was dominant. By 1996, the longhorn crazy ant had virtually replaced all the other ant species.

  6. Tapinoma sessile - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tapinoma_sessile

    Tapinoma sessile is a species of small ant that goes by the common names odorous house ant, sugar ant, stink ant, and coconut ant. [1] Their colonies are polydomous (consisting of multiple nests) and polygynous (containing multiple reproducing queens).

  7. Yellow crazy ant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yellow_crazy_ant

    Because yellow crazy ants have generalized nesting habits, they are able to disperse via trucks, boats and other forms of human transport. [1] Crazy ant colonies naturally disperse through "budding", i.e. when mated queens and workers leave the nest to establish a new one, and only rarely through flight via female winged reproductive forms.