European Fire Ant
Myrmica rubra
European fire ants pose a significant liability and safety concern in parks, recreational facilities, institutional grounds, and commercial properties with landscaping.
Their aggressive stinging behaviour can harm employees, customers, and visitors, and their hidden nests are easily disturbed by routine grounds maintenance.
Habitat
Establish colonies in landscaped grounds, turf areas, mulched planting beds, and under hardscape.
Grounds maintenance areas — mulch beds, tree pits, and shaded turf — are highest-risk zones. Nests are not visible from above and are discovered by disturbance.
Active Areas
Windsor
Expanding presence in established residential neighbourhoods and park areas
Tecumseh
LaSalle
Amherstburg
Lakeshore
Essex
Kingsville
Leamington
Chatham-Kent
Low prevalence. Sporadic infestations in established residential neighbourhoods. Population establishment in Chatham-Kent is possible under continued range expansion.
St. Thomas
Low prevalence. Occasional cases as range continues expanding across southern Ontario.
Seasonality
Grounds maintenance risk is present from April through October. Peak sting risk and colony activity occurs June through August. Winter dormancy reduces surface activity but colonies survive in deeper soil.
Spring
Summer
Autumn
Winter
Appearance
Medium (4-5mm), reddish-brown ants with two petiole nodes.
Workers can be distinguished from native red ants by their aggressive stinging behaviour and hidden soil nests under mulch, pavers, and turf. Presence should be confirmed by pest control professionals before grounds maintenance.
- Reddish-brown to red body throughout — head, thorax, and abdomen all similar colour
- Two-node petiole
- 12-segmented antennae with a 4-segmented club
- Stinger present — can and does sting repeatedly
- Nests are hidden in soil under leaf litter, mulch, rocks, and pavers — not visible as mounds
Behaviour
Grounds workers disturbing mulch, turf, or paving are at high risk of stings. The supercolony structure means removing one nest does not eliminate the infestation.
Risk assessment and PPE protocols should be established before maintenance in known infested areas.
Lifecycle
Colonies are polygynous with multiple queens and supercolonize — multiple interconnected nest sites form a single large colony. New queens may be produced within the colony rather than through nuptial flights, enabling the colony to spread laterally through gardens and grounds without producing swarmers. This makes European fire ants very persistent and difficult to eliminate.
Egg
Eggs produced by multiple queens distributed across the supercolony’s interconnected nest sites. High reproductive capacity means population recovery is rapid after partial treatment.
Larva
Larvae in multiple interconnected nests across the grounds. Their presence at multiple locations complicates elimination and requires comprehensive grounds-wide treatment.
Pupa
Pupal development in multiple nest sites supports continuous adult worker production. Complete elimination requires targeting queens in all nest sites simultaneously.
Adult
Workers at peak population in summer (June–August) represent the highest sting risk to grounds staff and site visitors.
All outdoor maintenance in affected areas should follow documented safe work procedures including PPE requirements and emergency response protocols.
Signs You May Have a Problem
- Grounds maintenance staff reporting stings during mulching, mowing, or pavement work
- Customers, visitors, or students stung in landscaped areas, playgrounds, or recreational grounds
- Discovery of hidden soil nests under mulch beds, tree pits, paving, or turf during routine grounds maintenance
- Red-brown ants swarming aggressively from disturbed ground during landscape or irrigation work
- Ant activity concentrated in shaded, moist areas — under hedges, in irrigated planting beds, or along shaded walkways
- No visible mounds but areas of disturbed soil under mulch or pavers confirming underground nest presence
- Multiple nest sites within a defined area confirming a supercolony — a single nest treatment will not resolve the infestation
Risks & Concerns
Significant liability risk if employees, customers, or visitors are stung on commercial grounds. Grounds maintenance staff are at high occupational risk without appropriate training and PPE.
Facilities serving vulnerable populations (schools, care homes, parks) face particular duty-of-care obligations.
Prevention
- Establish annual grounds surveys for European fire ant activity as part of the IPM programme
- Train all grounds maintenance staff to identify European fire ants and follow safe work procedures
- Place warning signs in known or suspected infested areas during peak season (June–August)
- Maintain an emergency response protocol for staff and visitors who are stung
- Consult a professional pest management company for grounds-wide bait treatment programmes
DIY Control
- Do not undertake DIY treatment for European fire ants in commercial settings — professional treatment and monitoring is strongly recommended
- Establish safe work procedures for grounds maintenance in affected areas while awaiting professional treatment
- Document all sightings with location and date for professional assessment
Professional Control
- Comprehensive grounds survey and colony mapping
- Coordinated grounds-wide bait application programme
- Staff training on identification, safe work procedures, and emergency response
- Scheduled annual monitoring and re-treatment programme with documented reports
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I tell European fire ants from other reddish ants?
Professional identification is important before treatment, as European fire ant treatment protocols (targeted ground nest treatment) differ from those for other ant species.
Treatment timing also matters — late spring through summer is most effective when workers are actively foraging.
Do European fire ants spread on their own?
On commercial grounds, European fire ant spread can occur through landscaping operations.
Ensure that contracted landscapers are aware of any known infestations and do not move infested soil or mulch. Inspect any delivered landscaping materials before installation.
What should I do after being stung by a European fire ant?
Ensure that accessible emergency epinephrine (EpiPen) is available on any commercial grounds where European fire ants are known to be present. Train staff to recognise allergic reaction symptoms.
Any stinging incident involving a customer or visitor should be documented, first aid provided, and medical attention sought if any systemic symptoms are present.
Is the European fire ant invasive in Ontario?
Commercial property managers should be aware that European fire ant infestations can spread to neighbouring properties through soil movement, plants, and landscaping equipment.
Follow any local municipality guidance on reporting and management of this invasive species.
Is the European fire ant sting dangerous?
Stinging incidents involving customers or staff on commercial grounds represent a significant liability.
European fire ant nests near outdoor seating, parking areas, or recreational grounds should be treated as a priority safety risk. Post warning signage near any known nest sites and engage a pest professional promptly.
How do I find and treat European fire ant ground nests?
Professional treatment is required for commercial grounds due to both safety and liability concerns. A thorough grounds inspection to map all active nest sites before treatment is important.
In heavily infested areas, multiple treatment visits may be required, and nest detection requires experience as the ants give few visual cues.
Do European fire ants damage my garden?
On commercial grounds, European fire ants in landscaped areas create a safety hazard for grounds maintenance staff. Protective gloves and long sleeves should be worn for any ground-level work in infested areas until treatment is complete.