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<blockquote data-quote="DS" data-source="post: 543544" data-attributes="member: 556"><p><span style="font-size: 12px"><span style="color: sienna">Ok this is for real.We have ants.Little brown buggers that are invading our kitchen through some crack I can't find.</span></span></p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"><span style="color: #a0522d">For some weird reason the cats like to roll in the places where we squashed them.</span></span></p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"><span style="color: #a0522d">I found this in a goggle search.</span></span></p><p>Odorous house ants get their name from the fact that workers give off a rotten coconut odor when crushed. They are often confused with the Argentine ant except their one node is flattened, not pointed, and it is not visible from above or the side because it is hidden by the abdomen. They are small, brown ants about 1/8-inch (3 mm) in length. Workers of the odorous house ant are all one size.</p><p>The odorous house ant is closely related to the ghost ant but is easily distinguished by size and coloration Ghost ants are considerably smaller and have a dark head and thorax and pale, almost translucent, abdomen and legs. The antennae of both species have 12 segments and no club.</p><p>Odorous house ants are found throughout the United States and from Canada to Mexico.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DS, post: 543544, member: 556"] [SIZE=3][COLOR=sienna]Ok this is for real.We have ants.Little brown buggers that are invading our kitchen through some crack I can't find.[/COLOR][/SIZE] [SIZE=3][COLOR=#a0522d]For some weird reason the cats like to roll in the places where we squashed them.[/COLOR][/SIZE] [SIZE=3][COLOR=#a0522d]I found this in a goggle search.[/COLOR][/SIZE] Odorous house ants get their name from the fact that workers give off a rotten coconut odor when crushed. They are often confused with the Argentine ant except their one node is flattened, not pointed, and it is not visible from above or the side because it is hidden by the abdomen. They are small, brown ants about 1/8-inch (3 mm) in length. Workers of the odorous house ant are all one size. The odorous house ant is closely related to the ghost ant but is easily distinguished by size and coloration Ghost ants are considerably smaller and have a dark head and thorax and pale, almost translucent, abdomen and legs. The antennae of both species have 12 segments and no club. Odorous house ants are found throughout the United States and from Canada to Mexico. [/QUOTE]
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