TERMITES – SOME INTERESTING FACTS
If you have a problem with termites or even if you just that reckon that you might have, you will have to learn about the appearance of termites and how they behave, unless, of course, you decide to call an expert in, which is clearly the easiest course. A common description of termites is that they look like little white ants.
Despite the fact that most termites are white, not all of them are. They are also not white ants and closer inspection of a termite will reveal that it only very casually resembles an ant in appearance.
In behavioural patterns, there is a closer resemblance to ants, as work is divided along sexual lines, as in ants. Termites are also completely unrelated to ants. They are not even distant relatives. In fact, it has lately been realized that termites are more closely related to cockroaches.
Ants, bees and wasps belong to the Order of Hymenoptera, whereas termites have been reclassified into a Super Order called Dictyoptera. It has been suggested that termites be reclassified as Family Termitidae within the Order of Blattodea (where cockroaches are).
Termites do loosely look like ants, it is true, but where they resemble ants a lot more is in their behaviour. Just like ants, the workers go out and bring back food for those members of the colony that do not often (or ever) leave the nest.
However, whereas ants will tunnel to get somewhere, as termites will as well, if traveling means being exposed to daylight or predators, ants will chance it, whereas termites will construct enclosed walk-ways or galleries to get there. This is also the duty of the workers, who, just as with ants, are exclusively female and blind.
If there is a threat to the nest, then the soldiers are called out. They have huge mandibles or jaws. Sometimes these mandibles are so large that the soldier termites cannot feed themselves and have to be fed by others. Then there are the winged termites which fly off to establish new nests.
At the top of the hierarchy is the queen. She normally has a very distended abdomen, which can be the size of a human fist, although all other body parts, head, legs etc, stay the normal size.
Workers and nest-bound termites are invariably white to cream in colour, because they never see the sun, whereas flying termites are brown. In Thailand they are a reddish brown with three pairs of large white wings. They tend to swarm during or just after rainfall and they fly out of cracks in the ground in bursts of fifty to a hundred.
They look like streamers. Thais consume these termites, called ‘maleng maw’ – they are fatty and full of protein. When they have mated, they drop to the ground, shed their wings. Then they search for the nearest crack in the earth to start the cycle all over again.
Termites do a massive amount of damage in warm countries, but they are still fascinating creatures and it is just thought of as bad luck if your house is chosen by them, unless you take sufficient steps to protect your property.