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Drywood termites live in dry (usually <12% moisture), sound wood and derive their moisture
requirements from the wood they consume. Infestations can occur in structural timbers in
buildings, pieces of furniture, flooring, doors and doorframes, window trim, wooden picture
frames, and other isolated pieces of wood. Their colonies are relatively small, with a few
thousand members lacking the true worker caste, and there are often multiple colonies in the
same structure.
Drywood termite galleries
Drywood termites do not need a connection to soil and there is no soil in their feeding galleries.
They do not build mud tunnels; they construct large, irregular galleries that run across and
with the wood grain, with a very smooth, clean, and sandpaper-like appearance. The galleries are
connected by openings small enough for one termite to pass through. The sure sign of drywood
termite feeding is their fecal pellets that are ejected from the galleries via kickout holes,
often found right below the damaged wood. These pellets are quite distinctive, and are hard,
elongate-oval with rounded ends, and have six concave sides.
Drywood species
Approximately 400 global species of drywood termite species are known, but only a few species
are important in the United States.
Powderpost or "furniture termites" (Cryptotermes spp.) have small fecal pellets and are smaller in
size than other drywood termites. Their feeding in furniture or movable wooden objects can reduce
wood to a fine powder. They can be found in Florida, southern Louisiana, Texas, Puerto Rico, and
Hawaii. The most widespread species is the tropical rough-headed powderpost termite (C. brevis), which
is easily distributed by human activity such as transporting infested furniture, and it has been
found as far west as Los Angeles and as far north as Ontario, Canada.
The other main group of drywood termites is Incisitermes spp. The most common species in the
west is the western drywood termite (I. minor), which is found in southern California, Arizona,
Utah, and has become established in Florida. This species infests both dead sections of living
trees and wooden articles in homes. The western drywood termite swarming period is midday on warm,
sunny days and typically occurs from September-October. However, in Arizona, swarming occurs at night in July.
The southeastern drywood termite (I. snyderi) is found primarily in seven southeastern states, South Carolina,
Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, and Texas. This species swarms at night, peaking between
8-10 pm, and is attracted to lights. The peak time period for swarming is late May through mid-June.
If you believe your home may be in danger from Drywood Termites, contact a Termidor pest control professional
now.
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