Getting Ant Control Right in Shreveport Starts With the Species
Species identification is the non-negotiable first step in any ant treatment. Across the thousands of North American ant species, treatment protocols vary significantly — and what works against one can trigger colony-splitting or dispersal in another. In Shreveport, Argentine ants, odorous house ants, carpenter ants, fire ants, and Pharaoh ants are the species our technicians encounter most frequently in residential properties.
Aerosol sprays eliminate visible ants without reaching the queen. The colony continues functioning — and in species like Pharaoh ants, the chemical stress caused by spraying triggers colony budding, producing multiple new satellite colonies where one existed before. The infestation spreads rather than shrinks.
Pharaoh Ant Warning — Sprays Cause Colony Splitting
When Pharaoh ants detect chemical threat, they execute a survival response called budding — the colony fragments into multiple independent groups, each establishing its own queen-led unit in a new location. A single misapplied spray can turn one infestation into five. If you have seen small pale ants in your Shreveport property, call a specialist before attempting any treatment.
Common Residential Ant Species in Shreveport
- Argentine Ants: Form supercolonies with thousands of queens and millions of workers. Highly adaptable foragers attracted to sweet food sources and moisture — and extremely difficult to eliminate without colony-targeted bait.
- Odorous House Ants: Identified by the strong rotten-coconut odour produced when crushed. Odorous house ants nest inside wall voids, beneath flooring, and under insulation — making visual location of the colony difficult without professional inspection.
- Carpenter Ants: Unlike termites, carpenter ants do not eat wood — they excavate it to create galleries for nesting. Large black carpenter ants seen inside a Shreveport property indicate an established structural nesting site, typically in moisture-softened wood.
- Fire Ants: Prevalent across the southern US, fire ants construct characteristic mound nests in lawns and open ground. Their sting is medically significant — capable of causing severe allergic reactions in sensitive individuals and posing particular risk to children and pets.
- Pharaoh Ants: Small, pale ants requiring targeted slow-acting bait — not sprays.