Getting Ant Control Right in Richardson Starts With the Species
Not all ants respond to the same treatment — and applying the wrong method can accelerate the problem rather than solve it. In Richardson, residential infestations most commonly involve Argentine ants, odorous house ants, carpenter ants, fire ants, and Pharaoh ants. Each species nests differently, responds differently to treatment, and requires a different professional approach.
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.
Spraying Makes Pharaoh Ant Infestations Worse
Pharaoh ant colonies do not retreat from aerosol spray — they split. Each fragment relocates independently with its own reproductives, rapidly establishing new satellite colonies in adjacent areas of the property. This is the most common reason Richardson homeowners find that DIY ant treatment causes the infestation to spread. Call a specialist first.
Common Residential Ant Species in Richardson
- Argentine Ants: Among the most persistent ant species in Richardson properties, Argentine ants form vast supercolonies with multiple queens operating in parallel. Their adaptability and foraging range make surface treatment ineffective — only slow-acting bait that reaches queens produces lasting results.
- Odorous House Ants: Named for rotten coconut smell when crushed. Nest in wall voids and under floors.
- Carpenter Ants: Excavate wood for nesting. Large black carpenter ants found indoors indicate a structural nesting site.
- Fire Ants: Found in southern states. Build mound nests in lawns. Stings can cause serious allergic reactions.
- Pharaoh Ants: Among the most difficult ant species to eliminate, Pharaoh ants establish nesting sites throughout a structure and respond to spray treatment by fragmenting into satellite colonies. Effective elimination requires slow-acting bait placed precisely on foraging routes — no repellents, no sprays, no short-cuts.