Md. Korzukhin et al., Modeling temperature-dependent range limits for the fire ant Solenopsis invicta (Hymenoptera : Formicidae) in the United States, ENV ENTOMOL, 30(4), 2001, pp. 645-655
We predict the future range of the fire ant Solenopsis invicta Buren within
the United States based on climate and its current extreme distributions.
To reach that goal, a dynamic model of colony growth with two time steps pe
r day was formulated that operates by colony area, S, and alate production,
a. Colony growth rate depended on daily maximum and minimum soil temperatu
res. Temperature records at 4,537 meteorological stations within the curren
t (near 1.5 million km(2)) and potential range of S. invicta were obtained
from NOAA's National Climatic Data Center. At each station, a colony was al
lowed to grow and lifetime female alate production was calculated. Estimate
d alate production was then examined at current extremes of the fire ant di
stribution at selected locations in Arkansas, Tennessee, and Oklahoma. Esti
mates from these locations were used to define four zones of colony prolife
ration success: certain, possible, undemonstrated, and improbable. An annua
l precipitation limit (510 mm) was selected to indicate regions where and c
onditions may prohibit growth in areas without supplemental water sources.
Results of the model predict that S. invicta will likely move 80-150 km nor
th in Oklahoma and Arkansas. It will also likely continue expanding into po
rtions of Virginia, Maryland, and Delaware in the east and New Mexico, Ariz
ona, California, Oregon, Nevada, and maybe even Washington and Utah in the
west.