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Termite Facts (for eastern subterranean termites or Formosan termites)

  • Termites are one of the few animals able to utilize wood/cellulose as a food source.
  • Termites have symbiotic protozoa and other microbes in their gut that digest cellulose.
  • Eastern subterranean termites are native termites that occur throughout the eastern United States.
  • Eastern subterranean termites occur in all 82 counties of Mississippi.
  • Mature eastern subterranean termite colonies contain around 50,000 to 200,000+ termites.
  • Formosan termites are non-native termites, first detected in Mississippi in 1984.
  • Formosan termites are currently known to occur in 25 counties in Mississippi.
  • Formosan termite colonies can contain more than one million termites, but are usually smaller.
  • Unlike ants and bees, termite workers may be either male or female.
  • Male reproductive termites are known as kings.
  • Unlike ants and bees, king termites live inside the colony with the queen.
  • Primary termite queens and kings may live 10 to 15 years or longer.
  • An established termite queen may lay more than 1000 eggs per day.
  • Older termite colonies may also contain secondary and tertiary reproductive termites.
  • Total egg production of secondary and tertiary reproductives may exceed that of the queen.
  • Eastern subterranean termites are beneficial to southern forests, helping decompose dead trees.
  • Termite workers do not have eyes; they are sightless.
  • Termites reproduce by producing winged reproductive termites, known as swarmers.
  • Swarmers leave the parent colony, find a mate, and attempt to start a new colony elsewhere.
  • Swarmers shed their wings shortly after swarming.
  • It takes a termite colony around five years or more to grow large enough to produce swarmers.
  • Fire ants readily prey on termite swarmers attempting to found new colonies.
  • Termites forage primarily in the top six to twelve inches of soil.
  • Termites forage randomly by tunneling through soil and over stone until they encounter wood.
  • Once they encounter a food source, workers recruit others to the source and begin feeding.
  • Older termite colonies do not have a single, central nest.
  • A mature termite colony will have many different “nest sites” (places where eggs are laid).
  • An average suburban landscape will contain several different termite colonies (up to 25/acre).
  • Finding eastern subterranean termite swarmers indoors is a sure sign the building is infested.
  • Buildings that are not properly protected from termites will become infested by termites.

Dr. Blake Layton, Extension Entomology Specialist
Department of Entomology, Mississippi State University             
Phone: 662-325-2960
Email: blake.layton@msstate.edu

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Publications

Publication Number: P2568

News

Black and white, labeled drawing of a winged termite and winged ant.
Filed Under: Household Insects, Termites, Pests March 13, 2024

House and building owners must be on high alert each spring as structures face dangerous attacks by swarms of both native and introduced termite species.

Native, subterranean termite species have started swarming in late February in South Mississippi to early March in more northern areas. The non-native, invasive and very damaging Formosan subterranean termite begins swarming in some parts of Mississippi in May.

A man stands outside a structure.
Filed Under: Termites September 29, 2022

The word “termite” strikes fear in the hearts of homeowners because this insect is the most economically damaging pest in Mississippi, is very common and requires constant vigilance. Blake Layton, entomologist with the Mississippi State University Extension Service, said the cost of termites is so large that it is hard to pin down.

Filed Under: Insects, Termites January 20, 2022

Can you tell the difference between a termite and an ant? Termites and ants share a number of similar physical characteristics, and it can be hard to distinguish between the two at first glance. Since termites can be active long before they are properly identified, mistaking them for ants could be a costly error!

Success Stories

Nine men and women stand in front of a metal building.
Volume 5 Number 2

A dream of the Mississippi Pest Control Association and the Mississippi State University Extension Service is coming true after more than 20 years, thanks to a generous donation by one of Mississippi’s oldest pest-control companies.

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Your Extension Experts

Portrait of Dr. Blake Layton, Jr.
Extension Professor
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Assistant Professor