Next on the Farmer's Plague Menu: Red Imported Fire Ants
| University of Missouri |
| Red Imported Fire Ants have been found in Missouri. This is bad news for farmers. |
Because of the aforementioned heat and drought, Missouri's farmers have had to buy hay from outside the state in order to feed their animals. Recently, a farmer in Ozark County found an active hive of red imported fire ants (RIFA) in a hay bale shipped from Florida. RIFA are a huge source of pain and trouble in the southern states, and there's an active quarantine in place to keep them from spreading further north.
Except now they're here?
Maybe, maybe not. The University of Missouri Extension reports that this particular hive was quickly identified and treated, and seems to have been snuffed out before it could spread. Which is good news, because a typical RIFA hive can contain 300,000 of the little red devils. They're highly aggressive, and inject an alkaloid-based venom with every sting -- and they sting often and repeatedly when disturbed. Their sting creates extremely painful, fluid-filled pustules on most people; a small percentage of the human population can experience anaphylactic shock. On the farming side, RIFA stings can adversely affect young animals, and the mounds they build are often one-foot high, which can negatively affect farm equipment in the field.
Oh, and they spread by swarming -- that sounds like fun doesn't it?






























