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What are termites?
Termites are incredible, small insects that have mastered cooperation allowing them to achieve great things, such as building skyscrapers, hollowing huge trees, moving amazing amounts of soil and of course, eating your house.
Most people are comfortable that they
know what an ant is, but hardly anyone seems sure they know what makes
a termite a termite. Termites are
not ants and certainly not white ants. That's a really sloppy
term, please don't use it. They are most closely related to the cockroaches,
and so are very different to ants.
Ants share their insect order with bees and wasps (the Hymenoptera).
Termites belong to their own insect order (the Isoptera) and have
several clear and obvious differences which make it fairly simple to tell them from apart:
Termites Vs Ants |

Termite |

Ant |
| Color |
most termites are typically whitish, often almost clear--you can usually see the food in their gut, but the winged ones are usually much darker (as above) | many possible colours, usually black or dark red or brown |
| Shape |
six-legged grub, fairly short legs | six-legged grub with narrow waist, legs longer. |
| Wings |
if present, 4, twice as long as body, all roughly the same size and shape,
deciduous. If winged, the body is darker |
if present, 4, about the same length as body, rear wings obviously smaller,
wings retained. Winged ants are typically about the same colour. |
| Head |
no eyes unless winged form |
usually obvious eyes |
| Antennae |
like a string of pearls |
definitely elbowed, with longer segments |
| Body |
soft | harder, tougher |
Termites belong to the Order Isoptera:
- (Pronounced Eye-sop-terr-a) , the termites, from the Greek, Iso
meaning equal and pteron, meaning wing. The
name refers to the wings of the reproductive caste, which isn't
very helpful as most termites are plain workers that never get
to grow wings. There are two pairs of wings, with the front pair
the same size as the hind pair. The name termite comes
from the Latin word termes meaning woodworm (which probably covered some beetle larvae as well).

Description:
Small,
pale, soft-bodied social
insects living in a nest or colony system. Primarily
cellulose feeding.
Divided into castes, the most numerous caste are relatively undifferentiated
and perform much of the colony work, there is a specialised soldier caste
with head and jaw structures differentiated with stronger features and often
mouthparts more suited to defence than feeding. The reproductive caste, known
as alates (winged ones) are produced when nymphs mature to develop wings and
a generally darker colouring. Metamorphosis is gradual (no pupal stage)
-
- Head rounded, eyes generally absent except in the reproductive caste, antennae
beaded, wings absent except in reproductive caste. Chewing mouthparts. Wings
deciduous, shed shortly after
nuptial flight through breakage at a suture near point of attachment
(hence de-alate), leaving small scales which persist. Termites are weak fliers,
flights occur only under favourable conditions: nearly still air, high humidity
and with falling barometric pressure indicating a likelihood of following
rain. No constriction of the abdomen (as in ants, bees and wasps). Here's
a similar description at the University
of Delaware
Termites
also behave in ways that makes them easy to identify. For a start, nearly every
type live completely in the dark (except when building or when the winged ones
are flying), so you usually only see them when something is broken or open.
Once exposed, they will try to follow their scent trails home. If these are
broken they just wander around looking lost or squeeze into any gap they can
find.
Most
species of termites have what is called a soldier caste. These grow strong heads,
often much darker than those of the other termites. Very often, these strong
heads also have big jaws. If you can find some of these among you termites,
it makes the job of identifying the species much easier. Soldiers may be rare,
only a few percent of the population, so look carefully.
Dr
Don's Termite Pages drdons.net/whatr
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