06/01/2026
If you're seeing very tiny black ants — we're talking barely visible — trailing across your
countertops or bathroom, there's a good chance you're dealing with Black Rover Ants.
Black Rover Ants are one of the most misidentified species in Central Texas. They're often mistaken for pavement ants or black garden ants, but they behave very differently — and the wrong treatment won't work.
What makes them difficult:
• Massive colony size — hundreds of thousands of workers
• Multiple queens per colony
• They bud (split) when threatened — spraying makes the problem worse
• They nest in soil, mulch, under slabs, and inside wall voids
• They're attracted to sweets and moisture
If you've been spraying them and they keep coming back — this is probably why. Rover
ants require a bait-based approach, not a spray.
■ 979-822-1564
| ✉■ [email protected]
■ City Pest Control — Bryan/College Station