Acrobat Ants in Coastal Southeastern North Carolina
Acrobat ants are easy to identify once you know what to look for. When disturbed, they raise their heart-shaped abdomens over their head and thorax in a defensive display, which is where the name comes from. They’re not aggressive, but their presence often signals an existing moisture or wood damage problem in the home.
How to Identify Acrobat Ants
- Size: 1/8 inch (small)
- Color: Black, or two-toned with a lighter thorax and darker abdomen
- Shape: Distinctly heart-shaped abdomen (the key identifier)
- Behavior: Raises abdomen over the body when disturbed
- Antennae: 11-segmented with three-segmented club
- Foraging: Travels in distinct trails along wires, branches, and structural elements
The heart-shaped abdomen is unique among ants in coastal NC and is the most reliable identifier.
Where Acrobat Ants Nest
Acrobat ants prefer damaged or moisture-compromised areas:
- Wood damaged by previous termite or carpenter ant activity
- Wet or rotted wood around windows, doors, and eaves
- Damp insulation in walls and attics
- Hollow tree limbs and tree cavities outdoors
- Behind siding with moisture intrusion
- Roof and gutter areas with water damage
Finding acrobat ants in a home is usually a sign of an underlying moisture issue. Treatment without addressing the moisture source typically leads to repeat infestations.
How to Tell Black from Red Imported
The two species look similar at a glance, behave identically, and sting just as painfully.
The reliable identifier is color:
| Feature | Red Imported | Black | Hybrid |
|---|---|---|---|
| Color | Reddish-brown head/thorax, darker abdomen | Uniformly dark brown to black | Intermediate, variable |
| Range in coastal NC | Dominant species | Extremely rare | Extremely rare |
| Mound appearance | Dome-shaped, loose soil | Same dome shape | Same dome shape |
| Sting | Severe, painful | Severe, painful (identical) | Severe, painful (identical) |
| Treatment approach | Bait + direct mound treatment | Same as RIFA | Same as RIFA |
If you’re in coastal NC and have fire ants, the simplest explanation is correct: they are Red Imported.
Visit the Red Imported Fire Ant page for full identification details, sting information, and treatment specifics.
What Acrobat Ants Want
Indoors, acrobat ants forage for:
- Sweet substances (sugar, syrup, honey, fruit)
- Protein sources (pet food, dead insects)
- Honeydew from aphids on plants (a common outdoor food source)
They often travel along wires, branches touching the house, and similar narrow pathways into the home.
How Healthy Home Treats Acrobat Ants
Acrobat ants are covered under all four annual protection plans. Effective treatment includes:
- Inspection to locate the nest and identify the moisture source attracting them
- Bait placement along foraging trails
- Targeted treatment of the nesting area
- Recommendations for addressing moisture or damaged wood issues
- Quarterly follow-up
Acrobat ant infestations often resolve permanently once the underlying moisture issue is addressed. Treating the ants alone, without fixing the moisture source, almost always leads to recurrence.
Covered Under:
- Home + Yard Protection ($935/year)
- Home + Mosquito Protection ($1,250/year)
- Ultimate Protection Plan ($1,545/year)
- Essential Home Protection (does not include yard treatment)
Frequently Asked Questions
Acrobat ants raise their heart-shaped abdomens over their head and thorax when disturbed or threatened. This behavior, which gives them their name, exposes glands that release defensive chemicals. It’s also a warning display to potential predators.
Acrobat ants often nest in wood that’s already been damaged by moisture or previous insect activity. They don’t initiate wood damage, but their presence usually indicates an existing moisture or pest problem in the structure. Treating acrobat ants without addressing the underlying moisture issue typically leads to recurrence.
Acrobat ants have a distinctive heart-shaped abdomen that’s the key identifier. They’re small (1/8 inch), usually black or two-toned (lighter thorax, darker abdomen). When disturbed, they raise the abdomen over their body. This combination of features is unique among ants in coastal NC.
