Will freezing kill ants?

Ants got into the cat food bag. I can’t afford to buy a new bag until I get my first unemployment check. Will putting the bag in the freezer kill them?

They’re those tiny ones, sometimes called sweet-eating ants, if that makes a difference.

I think it would kill the ants… but would it still be safe for the kitty to eat? (Never owned a cat, so I’m not sure.)

My WAG is that it wouldn’t kill them. How do they survive the winter? I’ve heard frogs can actually go into suspended animation and hibernate; maybe something like that applies as well.

That issue aside, why not freeze the bag, which would probably at least put them to sleep, then filter them out? Just make sure you don’t end up with ants all over your freezer (they could crawl out before freezing). Maybe put kitty food in ziplocs, freeze, take out, and pick out the ants or “strain” through old colander etc.?

Yes, it will kill them. I have done it occasionally with items that were infested with small ants (the ones called crazy ants).

Ants generally survive the winter in by taking refuge in parts of the nest that are deep enough to remain above freezing.

I believe ants are quite edible as well, so I would think it would still be safe for kitty to eat afterwards.

It would probably be OK. However, you might want to try putting it in a very warm place, say on top of the stove when you are using the oven. In this case, the ants are more likely to leave the bag (or at least try) before they die. If you put it in the freezer, lots of dead ants will end up in the bag.

Ah. I wondered at what temp the weather gets too cold for comfort.

Maybe a question of how many ants, how big the kitty is, etc. Some years ago the ex- and I had pets and now that I think about it, I recall one cat hurling and it contained a few ants. Thing is, he was already sick (vet had diagnosed something). Anyway there’s another issue: even if it wouldn’t be fatal to kitty, the cleanup might be unpleasant.

Interesting approach. Maybe use a (tight) metal container that won’t melt.

Hmmm. There are a few reasons I didn’t wanna do this. The main one is I don’t want to put the bag in some currently ant-free area, like the stove, and have a few of the departing ants make it back to HQ to tell all their buddies a) what an awesome place the stove is, and b) how to get there.

The second is that the warmer it gets, the better the ants seem to like it. Yesterday it was 108 degrees here in Portland-- probably even hotter in the house-- and it made them peppy as all get out. Their little ectothermic metabolisms were way jazzed; I think the heat is probably what gave them the gumption to find the cat food in the first place-- they’d never found it before.

The third can be summed up by paraphrasing Goldfinger: “No, Mr. Ant; I expect you to die!”

I know I’ll end up with ants in the food, but as long as they’re dead ants who tell no tales I think it’ll be fine. Kitty can eat around them. Or eat them; she likes many bugs.

I think the real problem here is that it’ll take your cat some time to finish the bag. Say three weeks. During that period those ants corpses will be decaying in your bag, potentially hurting your cat if eaten.

If you plan to pick out the ants then you’ll be fine.

If they are tiny ants, they will either decay or dessicate within a matter of days. I would doubt there would be any problem on those grounds.

Will they suffocate? Tape the bag and shake em to their death. Sweep the back porch, spread the food out and scare the ants off, rake the food into something to easily pick up a large amount. I’m sure there are a million ways to do this, most will probably require you to help.

No, they don’t require enough air to make this practical. They could survive for a long time even if you were able to seal the bag air-tight, which you probably couldn’t.

They are too small to hit the sides of the bag with enough force to kill them, no matter how hard you shake it.

Well, you could move the bag somewhere else until the ants abandon it and try to return to their colony. You probably can’t scare them all out. You will still have the possibility of some live ants remaining in the bag. If you put it on the back porch, you have the chance that something else will come along and eat it, or that other ants will find it.

There aren’t many that are a swift, certain, and handy as the freezer.

A dusting of talcum or Gold Bond powder will stop ants within five minutes and they won’t come back as long as it’s there. It may annoy a cat’s paws though, and they’re climbers so putting the food atop the refrigerator wont help. However, along baseboards and inside cabinets it’s a charm.

Take off and nuke the bag from orbit - it’s the only way to be sure.

An oven set to 350F would kill them for sure.