Timber Pests – Termites (Overview)

Purpose

Provide a practical summary of common termite risks in South East Queensland and the first-response approach on site. Always escalate to a licensed timber pest inspector for inspections/treatments as required.

  1. Common Termite Groups (SEQ)
  2. Signs & Conducive Conditions
  3. First Response On Site
  4. Treatment Pathways (High-Level)
  5. Escalation & Documentation

Common Termite Groups (SEQ)

  • Subterranean termites (e.g., Coptotermes, Schedorhinotermes, Nasutitermes)—primary structural risk.
  • Arboreal nests (trees) and mounds may indicate local pressure.
  • Non-structural species (rarely damaging structural timber) still require assessment.

Signs & Conducive Conditions

  • Mud/shelter tubes on foundations, piers, or walls; damaged/“drummy” timber; blistering paint.
  • Moisture issues: leaks, poor drainage, air-con drips, hot water overflows, garden beds against walls, stored timber.
  • Bridging/bridging risks at slab edges, steps, or landscaping.

First Response On Site

  1. Do not disturb workings unnecessarily (don’t break tubes).
  2. Photograph evidence; note moisture sources and entry points.
  3. Explain next steps: formal Termite Inspection (AS 3660 framework) and management options after inspection.

Treatment Pathways (High-Level)

Pathway When Considered Notes
Liquid treated zone (barrier) When soil/structure allows trenching or drill-and-inject Follow product label; ensure continuity; manage runoff
Baiting system When barriers are impractical or as part of integrated plan Install, monitor, and replenish per manufacturer guidance
Spot/foam (label-permitted) Emergency localised control Document thoroughly; does not replace full management

Escalation & Documentation

  1. Book a Termite Inspection with licensed inspector via ServiceM8.
  2. Complete required Formitize templates with photos and site map.
  3. If emergency spot treatment is necessary, follow label and company policy; document product, location, and volume.