Red Ant
You really don't want these ants in your pants!
Children, parents and educators will enjoy using these educational
plush toys to teach about hygiene, disease and the human body. Each
microbe comes with a description of the disease it causes or function it
performs. Use these fun, non-threatening toys to emphasize the
importance of washing hands and preventing sickness in social settings. Surface wash, air dry. The Red
imported fire ant (Solenopsis invicta), or simply RIFA, is one of over
280 species in the widespread genus Solenopsis. Although the red
imported fire ant is native to South America, it has become a pest in
the southern United States, Australia, Taiwan, Philippines, and the
southern Chinese province of Guangdong. There are also reports of ant
hills in Macau, the former Portuguese enclave that borders the province
of Guangdong. RIFA are known to have a strong, painful, and persistent
irritating sting. In the 1930s, colonies were accidentally introduced
into the United States through the seaport of Mobile, Alabama. Cargo
ships from Brazil docking at Mobile unloaded goods infested with the
ants. They have since spread from Alabama to almost every state of the
American South, from Texas to Maryland. Since the 1990s, infestations
have been reported in California in the West and New Mexico in the
Southwest, but probably via ship or truck (not overland) in the case of
California. The bodies of fire ants, like all insects' bodies, are
broken up into three sections: the head, the thorax, and the abdomen,
with three pairs of legs and a pair of antennae. Fire ants can be
distinguished from other ants by their copper brown head and body with a
darker abdomen. |