Workers are wingless, pale, with a round, yellow-brown head
and about 1/4 to 3/8 inch long.
Colonies have been
estimated to contain from 60,000 to 5 million workers, covering an area
of 25,000 ft2, with a foraging distance of 230 feet.
Workers forage for
food; tend eggs, young and reproductives; and build tubes.
They are the most
numerous and most easily recognized termites. They are creamy white, have
neither eyes or wings, and are only 1/4 inch or less long.
Workers need a high
humidity to survive and will carry mud up into the wood where feeding
to maintain a 97 percent relative humidity. Termites have the ability
to move their colony up and down in the soil to find the optimal temperature
and moisture conditions.
Workers build mud tubes from the soil to the wood in structures on which
they feed. Termites can feed on wood since they have protozoans in their
alimentary tract (gut) that digests cellulose, the basic component of wood.
Workers prefer to feed on fungus-infested wood, but can feed equally well
on undamaged wood. Workers secrete food material from their mouths and anuses
to feed the reproductives and soldiers.
EXAMPLE OF DAMAGE
DONE BY A TERMITE WORKER:
Click
on image to enlarge
Picture from: University of Florida, Institute of Food and Agricultural
Sciences
Workers feed along
the grain in the soft portion of the wood and form galleries lined with
a muddy fecal material. A large colony can consume about one pound of
wood per day.
Termites can feed on anything containing cellulose, the main component
of wood.