🔬 Life Cycle

Termite Colony Life Cycle — Castes, Swarms & Colony Growth

Reticulitermes flavipes · Blattodea: Rhinotermitidae

A subterranean termite colony is a superorganism that can live 20+ years and grow to millions of workers. Understanding colony biology explains why treatment must reach the queen.

🔄 Life Cycle

🥚Egg
🐛Nymph
🐜Worker
⚔️Soldier
🦋Alate
🥚
Egg
Queens Lay 2,000 Eggs Daily
The primary queen lays 2,000-3,000 eggs per day in mature colonies. Secondary reproductives supplement egg production. Eggs hatch in 2-4 weeks into first-instar nymphs.
🐛
Nymph
Nymphs Develop Into Castes
Nymphs differentiate into workers, soldiers, or reproductives through hormone-controlled developmental pathways. The caste ratio is actively regulated by the colony.
🐜
Worker
Workers — The Foragers & Destroyers
Pale, soft-bodied, blind workers comprise 90% of the colony. They do all foraging, food processing, nest construction, and larval care. Workers are the stage that actually eats wood.
⚔️
Soldier
Soldiers — Colony Defenders
Large-headed, jaw-heavy soldiers defend against ant attacks — their primary predator. They cannot feed themselves and are fed by workers.
🦋
Alate
Alates — Reproductive Swarmers
Winged reproductives (alates) are produced in mature colonies (3+ years). They swarm in spring, mate, shed wings, and attempt to found new colonies. Most die; 1-2% succeed.

🔬 Key Biology Facts

📅Colony founding: A new colony from a single mated pair produces its first workers after 6-12 months. Swarm-capable colony size requires 3-5 years.
🏰Colony size: Mature Reticulitermes colonies: 100,000-1,000,000 workers. Formosan termite colonies: 2-8 million workers.
🎯Treatment target: Termiticide soil barriers kill workers returning from foraging. Non-repellent products allow workers to carry lethal doses back to the colony, killing the queen.

📅 Seasonal Activity

Subterranean termites swarm in spring (March-May) after warm rain. Worker activity continues year-round in warm climates; slows in cold winters in northern states.

⏰ Treatment Timing

Liquid soil treatment: non-repellent fipronil (Termidor) or bifenthrin creates a lethal zone that workers contact and carry back. Bait systems (Sentricon): workers find bait stations, transfer active ingredient (noviflumuron) through trophallaxis to the queen. Allow 3-12 months for bait system colony elimination.

✅ Target the most vulnerable life stage.

🎯 Life Cycle Stage × Treatment Effectiveness

Termites never stop — colonies are active 24/7/365. Treatment timing should target swarmer emergence (spring) for detection, but actual colony treatment is effective year-round.

StageDurationTreatment Approach
Egg24–30 daysNot a treatment target — queen protection is the goal.
NymphSeveral monthsSusceptible to slow-acting baits carried back to colony by workers.
Worker1–5 yearsPrimary treatment target. Liquid soil treatments and bait stations work through workers.
SwarmerSeasonalSwarmers are a detection signal, not a treatment target — they indicate an established colony nearby.

⏰ Why Timing and Follow-Up Matter

Most treatment failures happen because of two mistakes: treating only once, and treating only the visible population. Life cycles mean there are always individuals in a pesticide-resistant stage (eggs, pupae, or protected cases) that will emerge after your first treatment.

💡 Key principle: You're not treating today's population — you're breaking the reproductive cycle.

❓ Life Cycle FAQ

How does knowing the life cycle help me treat this pest?
Life cycle knowledge tells you which stages are present and which are vulnerable. Treating when only adults are present misses eggs that will hatch in days. Timing treatments to coincide with the vulnerable stages — and planning follow-ups for resistant stages — dramatically improves outcomes.
Why do pests come back even after a thorough treatment?
Eggs, pupae, and protected life stages (like cockroach egg cases) are resistant to most insecticides. They hatch or emerge after treatment and rebuild the population. The solution is scheduled follow-up treatments timed to catch each new cohort as it becomes vulnerable.
How long does a complete life cycle take?
Cycle duration varies by species and temperature — warmer temperatures accelerate all stages. At typical indoor temperatures (70°F), most common household pest cycles complete in 4–12 weeks. This is why 6-week treatment protocols are the standard minimum for most infestations.
📚 Sources: EPA Termite Guide · NPMA Termite Info
Published: Jan 1, 2025 · Updated: Apr 7, 2026