Shop Products
Houzz Logo Print
jtd1216

What are these cone-shaped burrows in my yard?

jtd1216
14 years ago

I have a small mulch bed (very little mulch--the rest is sandy underneath), and I notice these little (2" diameter max) cone shaped burrows in the ground. They look like upside down ant hills. I've tried scooping in and around them, but have found nothing! I get rid of them one night and all new ones are there the next morning. There is probably about 10 or 12 of them. Any ideas? I want to note that these are nearly perfect circles. I originally thought it was a skunk, but they seem too perfect/symmetric. I am in the North East, if that helps. I am just worried it's some insect like a termite that's doing it. But from my research, they go up, not down.

Comments (20)

  • joed
    14 years ago

    Pictures would be nice. Are they only shallow holes or are they tunnels.
    Could be gophers, rats, ground squirells.

  • lafdr
    14 years ago

    Sounds like "ant lions" They are the larvae of some insect and trap and eat ants and other insects that fall in their cone and can not get out the steep sides. You can catch them if you scoop out the cone and dirt below and they wriggle downwards. I have never heard anything bad about them. We have them all over and the kids catch them for fun then let them go. I am curious if anyone knows more or what they grow into.

  • lindac
    14 years ago

    Sounds like nite crawler burrows to me not harmful at all.

  • joed
    14 years ago

    At 2" diameter it won't be nightcrawlers.

  • jtd1216
    Original Author
    14 years ago

    It looks just like this!!
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Antlio...

    This is what the area looks like! but I don't think we have those Antlions up in the Northeast. I could be wrong though.

    http://www.asknature.org/images/uploads/...

  • mike_kaiser_gw
    14 years ago

    Take some pictures to your local county extension agent, they should be able to help.

  • joed
    14 years ago

    You need to give use the complete link not the one that ends ...

  • airqual_guy
    14 years ago

    I'm voting antlion. I grew up in the South, used to see dozens of the little pits under the edge of porches, eaves, any sandy soil protected from the weather. If you put an ant in one, the antlion at the bottom will throw sand at it to knock it down within reach. Mealtime!

  • Ina Plassa_travis
    14 years ago

    the best way to tell is the size of the hole, and the composition of the hill - tiny particulate matter usually means ants, little green things like capers are grubs, little balls of mud are almost always earthworms.

    warmblooded pests usually leave holes bigger than you describe your hills to be, and ant lion craters tend to look like, well, craters.

    a sticky trap set amongst them might provide some clues, though : )

  • salena
    14 years ago

    Down here in Texas the pest is the Armadillo. Yep, cone shaped 'holes' everywhere. They are seeking worms/grubs. Hate them......they can ruin a lawn.

  • loves2read
    14 years ago

    could be moles or voles as well
    we get little dirt hills where they come up in our lawn--maybe not perfect cones
    I did not try the links for pictures

    we have terrible time getting rid of them from our yard--
    have tried the dry bait pellets and also spraying the yard with castor oil--was out there yesterday doing that...

    if it is moles/voles--and you use the spray--
    you should spray only part of the yard and try to move them outwards in sections--
    like one third--then add the next third--then the final one--that encourages them to evacuate...

  • bippylove
    14 years ago

  • diveguy1
    14 years ago

    They're cicada killer wasps

    http://ww2.lafayette.edu/~hollidac/cicadakillerhome.html

    I've used many things to rid my property of these (remember they return yearly!) I had some lighter fluid after I purchased a gas grill a number of years ago. Works well, after a few squirts down the hole at dusk poof and the little buggers are toast.

    Bob

  • texasredhead
    14 years ago

    Well, Bob, what in the hell damage are these little fellows doing that you feel disposed to kill them? Then there are those gastly earthworms that leave little piles of dirt in your grass. That lighter fluid otto kill them thar worms.

  • bus_driver
    14 years ago

    The ant lion works/builds traps in very fine soil, it will be almost like dust. Their traps are in DRY dirt. The holes originally described could be the work of skunks. They burrow for grubs.

  • kenanlin_bellsouth_net
    13 years ago

    In our lawn there are tunnels just under the grass. We live in South Louisiana. On our walkway there is a pile of dirt next to the stepping stones which leads to several raised tunnels in every direction and pattern. It seems to be a round tunnel I can shove a broom handle into. Could this be a snake of some sort?

  • Carmen Lawson
    6 years ago
    last modified: 6 years ago

    They kill Termites and Ants..... They are a helpful insect. http://lancaster.unl.edu/pest/resources/antlions.shtml 

  • josephene_gw
    5 years ago

    In the south esp la. & tx they have crawdad chimneys. Drop a rock in the chimney and hear water.

  • toxcrusadr
    5 years ago

    @kenanlin your post is from 2011 sadly but what you have (had) there is moles.