Houston homeowners are being told to watch their outlets this spring, as tawny crazy ants surge into neighborhoods and swarm the very places you least want them: HVAC units, breaker boxes and other electronics. Pest pros say these tiny, fast-moving ants can pack into warm equipment housings, causing short circuits, mysterious shutdowns and repair bills that can snowball. Because they love tight, cozy cavities where wiring lives, their activity can look a lot like random, untraceable electrical glitches. Local pest companies and entomologists add that do-it-yourself sprays usually do not knock out established colonies, and that calling in a professional early can keep a nuisance from turning into a four-figure fix.
Tawny crazy ants are one of the tougher pest problems Houston is facing right now, a spokesperson said, according to ABC Home & Commercial Services. The company is urging homeowners to book inspections before peak foraging season and warns that many over-the-counter insecticides barely dent confirmed infestations. Its advisory flags outdoor HVAC units, junction boxes and breaker panels as prime hot spots where ants can slip in unnoticed until something suddenly stops working.
Why the ants go after electronics
Entomologists say tawny crazy ants (Nylanderia fulva) were first recorded in Harris County in 2002 and have since spread into more than 40 Texas counties, according to Texas A&M AgriLife Extension. The extension notes that these ants build dense, multi-queen “supercolonies” that shrug off simple spot treatments. In cities and suburbs, those massive populations have repeatedly turned up inside electrical enclosures and appliance housings, where their sheer numbers are enough to trigger equipment failures.
How ants short out gear
Researchers say the destruction is part behavior, part bad luck. An ant that is electrocuted on a live contact can release alarm pheromones that lure more workers straight into the current, and the buildup of dead ants and nesting debris can bridge connections or clog moving parts, according to University of Florida IFAS. The threat has been serious enough in previous seasons that some Houston-area facilities have brought in specialists to protect mission-critical systems, as reported by CBS News. Facility managers are advised to keep panels tightly sealed, clear vegetation away from enclosures and document recurring trouble spots to share with pest professionals…