π Steps
1
Identify the ant species
Pavement ant (sidewalk mounds): small sandy mound in pavement cracks; small dark ants. Fire ant (lawn mounds): dome-shaped, no obvious entry hole on top; aggressive red-brown ants. Odorous house ant (minimal mound): trails near foundation without significant mound. Species determines treatment.
2
For pavement ants β granular bait
Apply imidacloprid or spinosad granular ant bait around mound perimeters in early morning or late afternoon when workers are active. Don't disturb the mound before baiting.
3
For fire ants β two-step method
Broadcast granular bait (Amdro or Extinguish Plus) across the entire lawn, then treat individual mounds 2 weeks later with bifenthrin granules + water drench.
4
For carpenter ant satellite nests
Large black ants excavating wood mounds in dead stumps or landscape timber: find the main nest in dead wood, remove the wood if possible, apply bifenthrin or permethrin to the exposed nest chamber.
5
Prevent recurrence with perimeter treatment
After treating outdoor mounds, apply bifenthrin perimeter spray along the foundation to prevent mound-foragers from entering the structure.
π‘ Tips
- Never water or disturb fire ant mounds before applying bait β agitated fire ants don't collect bait effectively
- Some ant species (acrobat ants, pyramid ants) build aesthetically unpleasant mounds that cause no real damage and require no treatment
- Granular baits must be fresh β store in sealed containers in a cool, dry location and use within 6 months of purchase