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1 August 2000 Seasonal Studies of an Isolated Red Imported Fire Ant (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) Population in Eastern Tennessee
Anne-Marie A. Callcott, David H. Oi, Homer L. Collins, David F. Williams, Tim C. Lockley
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Abstract

Seasonal studies on a 1,200-ha isolated infestation of Solenopsis invicta Buren located in McMinn County, TN, were initiated in 1993 and continued through 1997. Winter survivability was evaluated and compared with a southern Mississippi site. The impact of S. invicta on local myrmecofauna was compared with a Tennessee non-infested site. Data collected over four winters indicate that consecutive days at a low ambient air maximum temperature is more indicative of S. invicta winter survivability than minimum temperature. After significant S. invicta mortality the first winter (1993–1994), we did not find significant differences in ant species diversity between the S. invicta infested Tennessee site and a similar, but non-infested site, 32 km away. Species commonly collected in the S. invicta infested site included Forelius pruinosus Roger, an unnamed Forelius sp., Paratrechina terricola (Buckley) and Pheidole vinelandica Forel.

Anne-Marie A. Callcott, David H. Oi, Homer L. Collins, David F. Williams, and Tim C. Lockley "Seasonal Studies of an Isolated Red Imported Fire Ant (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) Population in Eastern Tennessee," Environmental Entomology 29(4), 788-794, (1 August 2000). https://doi.org/10.1603/0046-225X-29.4.788
Received: 1 April 1999; Accepted: 1 May 2000; Published: 1 August 2000
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KEYWORDS
interspecific competition
red imported fire ant
Solenopsis invicta
winter survivability
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