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Termite Alate

once a year
Location: lafayette, CA 94549
October 26, 2010 11:40 pm
Hi Bugman,
Love this site,,, but couldn’t find anything quite like I’ve experienced for the past 2 years… I live in Lafayette California, just over the Berkeley Hills and after the October rains (last year and now) I had an infestation in the house of some bugs… Quite a few, and concentrated in various areas.
I can only think they’re termites based on all the research I’ve done but there’s no picture that look quite like these guys… They’re not pale…. they’re not RED,,,, They are about 6mm & dark dark brown. I find them in the sink, the carpet, the bathroom floor… etc… This year there are less than last, , , but the storm this year was more mild… (?!?)
And its not just what they LOOK like, but how they act… the pictures I have show a part of the situation – – they appear to travel in pairs and one puts its abdomen up in the air (attracting a mate?) then when they pair up it’s like a choo-choo train trip with one attached to the others back end! This morning I found (and captured) 4 in my sink, put them in a zip lock bag … and they just move around in there (for ~ 2 days, then die). No apparent ability to escape.
Last year I panicked and asked a termite guy to come out , , , he found no evidence of mud-tunnels or anything else, but still offered to do a multi thousand dollar preventative job. . .
Yikes, , , now that I zoom in on my pictures, I wonder if I should have taken him up on the deal… abdomen looks bigger than I thought (to me it looked flat!)…
Thanks for your help!
(but help fast??)
Signature: Alex

termite alate alex 300x206 Termite Alate

Termite Alate

Hi Alex,
Thanks for your compliments, but as we have stated numerous times in the past, we are artists, not scientists, and we have no background in entomology, nor do we endorse extermination, but there are always exceptions, and that would include a situation where an infestation of Termites is compromising the structure of a home.  You definitely have photographed a Termite, and we believe we have found a match on BugGuide that also shows the posture that you have also photographed and described.  The species is not identified.  The same person also submitted an image of a winged Termite Alate, and there is a robust dialog regarding the image posted to BugGuide and the possibility that it is a Subterranean Termite.  There is also a dark colored winged Alate image on BugGuide that is identified as belonging to the family Rhinotermitidae.  BugGuide has other images, many from California, that show black individuals that are identified as Subterranean Termites.  It is the nymphs and workers of the Termite colony that are light colored and sometimes called White Ants.  This does not appear to be the Western Subterranean Termite,
Reticulitermes hesperus, which Charles Hogue profiles in Insects of the Los Angeles Basin where he indicates:  “In Los Angeles and much of the west, this is the species that causes the greatest damage.”  We believe you may be correct that the image may be illustrating the act of dispersing pheromones to attract a mate.  The newly matured reproductive individuals are known as Alates and they are winged.  They usually swarm after a rain, and the fact that you find them each year indicates there is most likely a colony in your home.  Subterranean Termites nest in the ground, so we would suspect they are probably in your crawl space, and if you find them in the kitchen and bathroom, there may be water damage to the wood in those areas of the home that are providing food for the colony.  It is important to stress that not all Termites are destructive to homes, and that in nature, Termites play an important role in breaking down rotting wood that becomes incorporated into the soil.

termite alate alex 2 300x204 Termite Alate

Termite Alate

Incredible feedback and I agree with everything you’re pointing out (not to mention, learning a ton!).
I am suspicious of a woodpile that’s just outside our house (about 3-4′ away) but certainly wonder how they’d be getting into the house unless they’re in the crawlspace…
Regardless, I would find some of the mud-tunneling areas outside the house – but would I find them even in the crawlspace? or would those possibly not be evident since it’s usually dark down there anyway… I read that they like the moisture so that mud tunnel job helps them retain that!
Thanks again!
Alex

What's That Bug? does not endorse extermination

Termite Alates

Small flying insect with large wing-to-body ratio
Location:  Malibu, CA
October 7, 2010 8:45 pm
Hi bugman!
I was hiking today and suddenly surrounded by these guys. Their swarm was actually kind of magical, they looked like mystical cartoon bugs with only wings and no bodies! I found a few congregated on the ground and got a good picture.
What is this bug? I’ve never seen anything like it!
Signature:  Thanks, -Kali

termite alates kali 300x206 Termite Alates

Termite Alates

Hi Kali,
These are Termite Alates, the reproductive kings and queens on their nuptial flight.  Each pair may become the start of a new colony, or they might continue to live in the parent colony.  There are often multiple royal couples in established colonies.  The alpha Queen can become massive, something you would never expect from such lithe virginal adolescents.  Most of these Alates will not become new colonies, instead becoming an important link in the food chain.  They are preyed upon by bats, swallows and other insectivores including lizards and spiders and many other native creatures.

termite alates kali cu 300x175 Termite Alates

Termite Alates

Pacific Coast Dampwood Termites

Possible Beetle?
Location:  Northern California
September 25, 2010 3:33 pm
Hi Bugman,
We found these buggers yesterday on a redwood overhang outside our house located on the San Francisco peninsula, California. We’re having especially warm weather right now — a slow transition into fall. They seem to have 6 legs and 2 antennae, a dark brown or black lower half, with a reddish brown head. They are about 7-8 mm in body length.
Thanks for your help!!
Signature:  Hal

pacific coast dampwood termite hal 300x258 Pacific Coast Dampwood Termites

Pacific Coast Dampwood Termite

Hi Hal,
This sure looks like a Pacific Coast Dampwood Termite,
Zootermopsis angusticollis, to us.  Try comparing your image to this image on BugGuide.

What's That Bug? does not endorse extermination

Termite

Bug that flies
May 23, 2010
These bugs fly, but i see wings all over the house, window sill and all. Seems as the bug dies the wings disconnect or something. They are very small bodies. I think they are coming from
the baseboards. The house is carpets, and the baseboards are lined with carpets so i guess the bugs crawl out from under.  My dad said it happends once a year but i even saw one on my beadspread adn the other had no wings it is was moving like a booger with feet.
I have seen piles of something maybe wood, but its stacked in little
piles and I vacuum and they always reappear. sux. Are they termites or somthign else? My dad says they aren’t but i don’t thinki he knows. Im in a really old building. I have a $25 battery spray bottle of termite killer, help please
Adam
Fort lauderdale FL

termite adam 300x205 Termite

Termite

Dear Adam,
This is a Termite Alate, the winged reproductive form.  Based on your letter, it sounds like you have a well established colony or colonies in your home.  The presence of the winged Alates each year is evidence that new colonies may be forming in your home.  We doubt that your battery spray bottle will eradicate the colony.

Termite Alates

Are these termites?
April 23, 2010
We have these small bugs. They are less than an inch long. They have blackish bodies and 2 pairs of white/clear wings. They smarmed today, and it’s raining. Last spring they swarmed on day. It seemed like it was raining then. They are all over the attic. My dad set up a bug bomb up there and they cleared out temporarily. But I wanted to be sure that these are termites.
LM
Southeast Missouri

termites lm 300x177 Termite Alates

Termite Alates

Dear LM,
Your suspicions that these are Termites is correct.  They are the winged reproductive Aletes that often swarm after rain to mate and set up new colonies.  While the bug bomb your father set off may have killed these Alates, it is very doubtful that the pesticide has penetrated to the colony.  A professional should be consulted.

Spelling Correction thanks to Eric Eaton
Daniel:
The April 23 post of “termite aletes” should have read “termite alates,” with another “a.”  That is the term for winged reproductives of termites and ants.
Eric

Termite Soldier

Is this a termite?
April 1, 2010
These bugs are less than a quater inch and seem to be eating wood in our garden. We need to know if we need to be concerned about them getting into the house and eating wood. They are under rocks.
Lance
North Central Texas (DFW)

termite soldier lance 300x288 Termite Soldier

Soldier Termite

Hi Lance,
You are correct.  This is a Termite, more specifically, one of the caste of Soldiers whose job it is to defend the colony against attack.  Termites perform a very necessary function of breaking down wood so that it can be converted to rich humus, providing necessary organic matter which results in more fertile soil.  There are many species of Termites, and the ones that are breaking down wood in the garden are generally not the same species that do damage in homes.

OK, thanks for the info.
I’ve only seen these soldiers and not the others. Are the others underground or do they have a mound somewhere?
Lance

They are probably underground.

Swarming Termite Alates

Tiny black, four-winged bug.
April 3, 2010
Bugman:
Thid bug appears to only be found in my restrooms. It is tiny, long (quarter of an inch or less) and has four wings. I’ve seen that it loses it wings and usually crawls instead of flies. My first idea was that it was a termite, but termites are clearish-white while this bug is black. It has six legs, antennae, and a hard-looking shell. Please inform on how to get rid of this bug. Thank you! I appreciate it.
Thank you, Truc
I live in Southern CA; in restrooms.

termite aletes truc 300x239 Swarming Termite Alates

Termite Alates

Hi Truc,
These are swarming Termite Alates, the reproduction kings and queens and they are trying to embark on a nuptual flight to start new colonies.  Since they are in the bathroom, we suspect they are living in Termite infested wood, perhaps wood that got wet some time in the past.

Spelling Correction thanks to Eric Eaton
Daniel:
The March 23 post of “termite aletes” should have read “termite alates,” with another “a.”  That is the term for winged reproductives of termites and ants.
Eric

Rottenwood Termites, we think

Second Floor Termite
April 2, 2010
In October and November of last year, we had flying termites swarming in the second floor of the house. They seemed to be coming out of a damaged (eaten) area of the floor near some “patio” doors that used to lead out to a deck that had been removed in 2007. Today, a contractor opened the stucco and found a lot of damage along with some living bugs shown in the pictures. They looked a bit more whitish to us than they appear in the photos.
Joe and Joan
On Twin Peaks in San Francisco

termites joe 300x242 Rottenwood Termites, we think

Termites

Hi Joe and Joan,
Our best guess is that you have Rottenwood Termites in the family Thermopsidae based on the possibilities on BugGuide, though that is just a guess.  Thanks for providing our readership with valuable images of Termites.

termites joe 2 300x233 Rottenwood Termites, we think

Termites


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