Chris Kott wrote:Are there any animal controls for them? Will chickens eat them, or is it like army ants, who might eat the chicken? Also, would French marigolds work? Their root systems exude an insecticide so potent that you only need grow them once every three years or so to get the insecticide effect, although that's at the root zone, and it might only work if you plant them on the ant hills. As to the fungus, is it one kind only, and does it colonise only specific types of plant, and furthermore, do pigs like the fungus? Or is the fungus toxic?
-CK
One thing to realize is that the ant hills are times are so large that if a horse steps on it and collapses, you can lose the horse, no, this is not an exaggeration. Without attacking the fungus, you are getting nowhere,
chickens might eat them, but that is expected by the colony, won't really slow them down.
A pig, trying to dig out this fungus, would quickly quit, due to the depth and also the guard ants, which are pretty large, and definitely aggressive, and in a large colony, dangerous. By the way, a trick by the indigenous people reputedly was if in the forest, and cut badly, to stomp near a colony, so the guards come out. Then, grab one at a time, pressing their pincers across the wound, after they pinch, remove the body, leaving just the head. The head will remained pinched for 25+ hours. A natural suture?