Fire Ants Turn Into a Stinging Life Raft to Survive Floods | Deep Look

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  • Опубликовано: 26 сен 2022
  • During hurricane season, as floodwater flows into their nest, red fire ants build a terrifying raft - out of their own interlocking bodies. If you wade into this ant raft nightmare, you’ll likely get a vicious bite and sting.
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    --
    During hurricane season, as residents of states like Florida, Texas, Louisiana and South Carolina escape rising waters, they sometimes have the added misfortune of wading into large groups of floating red fire ants that have assembled into a raft. These ants, whose scientific name is Solenopsis invicta, are also known as red imported fire ants or RIFA because they arrived in the United States from South America. There, they evolved on the margins of rivers that flood regularly, in an area that encompasses western Brazil, northern Argentina, Paraguay and Bolivia.
    ---+ What happens if a red fire ant bites you?
    It’s more accurate to say that red fire ants bite and sting. They use their large mandibles to grab onto the skin and anchor themselves. Then, they dig their stinger in - sometimes multiple times - and inject venom. An itchy welt pops up at the site of the sting and later turns into a pus-filled blister called a pustule. A small number of people are allergic to red fire ant venom and can go into anaphylactic shock and die if they don’t receive prompt medical care.
    ---+ Why are red imported fire ants a problem?
    In addition to their stings, red imported fire ants damage crops, hurt livestock and displace native ants.
    ---+ Find additional resources and a transcript on KQED Science:
    www.kqed.org/science/1980343/...
    ---+ More Great Deep Look episodes:
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    #solenopsisinvicta #antraft #fireants
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Комментарии • 462

  • @gabrielaquiros1966
    @gabrielaquiros1966 Год назад +723

    Hi, I produced this episode of Deep Look. Many of you have asked whether the red fire ant queen makes it onto the raft. Linda Bui, professor of environmental studies at Louisiana State University, told me she often saw the queen riding on top of the raft when she studied how red fire ants make them.
    And it turns out there’s no free ride on an ant raft. Even the queen has to work.
    “Sometimes she carries bundles of eggs in her mouthparts,” Bui said.
    Sadly, we didn’t see the queen when we filmed our episode.

    • @ieatthebooty2494
      @ieatthebooty2494 Год назад +27

      I appreciate this, I was curious. I assumed she'd be their priority though lol

    • @phaolo6
      @phaolo6 Год назад +8

      3:05 Wait, aren't the winged ants queens? (I saw at least 3 in there)

    • @gabrielaquiros1966
      @gabrielaquiros1966 Год назад +55

      Hi Paul Sde. I produced this episode of Deep Look. Thank you for your question. Those winged ants aren't queens. They're male and female sexual ants, known as alates. (Male alates, also called drones, are darker and have smaller heads than female alates). Sexual alates fly out of the nest a few times a year and mate. "Mating flights take place on a warm day after heavy rains," says Walter Tschinkel, who has studied red fire ants at Florida State University. Once one of the female alates has mated, then she drops her wings and starts a colony, of which she is the queen. Thanks for watching! -Gabriela

    • @phaolo6
      @phaolo6 Год назад +11

      @@gabrielaquiros1966 Thank you for the info and for the cool video! :)

    • @ashokrajl
      @ashokrajl Год назад +1

      Thank you @Gabriela for clearing this up. Now i won't have to sometimes worry about this sleepless.

  • @berend4983
    @berend4983 Год назад +1501

    Respect for the person who got stung by ants to make this video

    • @unsatisfiedfans7422
      @unsatisfiedfans7422 Год назад +157

      That person is probably Coyote Peterson

    • @majoroldladyakamom6948
      @majoroldladyakamom6948 Год назад +157

      I've been bitten by a few fire ants on our 300-acre family Ranch just S of DFW Metroplex.
      It feels like someone lit a wooden match and put it into your foot.
      Thus, the name?
      Most likely. 🤔

    • @reionj8816
      @reionj8816 Год назад +5

      Ikr ahahah

    • @TragoudistrosMPH
      @TragoudistrosMPH Год назад +35

      I have scars on my feet from when they bit us as kids. (Small scars). My younger brother dropped a soda can and left it on the floor by our beds... -_-

    • @reionj8816
      @reionj8816 Год назад +15

      @@TragoudistrosMPH ooooh man, I wouldn't wish that on anyone

  • @IsoyaYasuji
    @IsoyaYasuji Год назад +307

    The person took those stings like a champ

    • @tgnm9615
      @tgnm9615 Год назад +6

      Must be really itchy!
      And
      Hello Beto viewer :)

    • @fuzzbuzz1122
      @fuzzbuzz1122 Год назад +3

      can believe i would found you here also😂

    • @chrishayes5755
      @chrishayes5755 Год назад

      I feel like listening to this videos commentary and music overlay was worse than being stung by fire ants.

    • @josef-1209
      @josef-1209 Год назад

      waw you're here as well

    • @theanonymous9775
      @theanonymous9775 Год назад

      This is the weirdest video I have seen you on

  • @TehhCake
    @TehhCake Год назад +462

    Vicious creatures, but the ingenuity of ants never fails to impress me. I doubt a group of humans could work together so efficiently in a sudden high-pressure situation like that.

    • @SongbirdOfficial
      @SongbirdOfficial Год назад +42

      When you're running on 100% instincts, 0% cognition, it's easy to do things in a snap without thinking or questioning it.

    • @PigeonHoledByYT
      @PigeonHoledByYT Год назад +16

      Next time there is flooding humans should take their young and make a raft?

    • @TheChattounet
      @TheChattounet Год назад +1

      @@SongbirdOfficial no...

    • @selectionn
      @selectionn Год назад +7

      @@PigeonHoledByYT Thats a genius idea

    • @pierrecurie
      @pierrecurie Год назад

      @@SongbirdOfficial 100% instincts = 100% derp = quick drown

  • @reionj8816
    @reionj8816 Год назад +31

    Ouch, the person who was the test subject. I can feel the pain

  • @DragleX219
    @DragleX219 Год назад +73

    Imagine drowning in flood, when trying to go up surface for air and accidentally gulp down this ball of fire ants.

    • @jamiehughes5573
      @jamiehughes5573 Год назад +25

      Mmm spicy protein

    • @smexijebus
      @smexijebus Год назад +22

      All those ants get to experience the Nine Circles of Dante's Intestines

    • @user-aeb87825
      @user-aeb87825 Год назад +1

      @@smexijebus They'll still your mouth first though.

  • @NhutNguyen-sf6fl
    @NhutNguyen-sf6fl Год назад +98

    As an ant keeper, experience hundreds of colony of variety of species. Fire ant in my country (Solenopsis Giminata) , is the most fierce, successful and hardest one to keep. They always find their own solution, what an invasive creature!

    • @fritagonia
      @fritagonia Год назад

      They are invasive, almost as good as humans (Homo Sapiens)!

  • @notfine12yearsago97
    @notfine12yearsago97 Год назад +97

    I never knew that they can sting I always thought that they just bite, thanks for the info Deeplook.

  • @nelsona9381
    @nelsona9381 Год назад +30

    Props to the guy who sacrificed his hand for demonstration

  • @willemvandebeek
    @willemvandebeek Год назад +50

    Don't feel bad for the ants sicking their heads into water, because their respiratory system is in their abdomen and thorax. :)

  • @samuelbunkly2527
    @samuelbunkly2527 Год назад +36

    On one hand it's a fire ant landmine, but on the other, they're tiny ant pilgrims!

  • @blueberry_borb
    @blueberry_borb Год назад +260

    Absolutely fascinating. I always wondered how fire ants turned their colonies into living rafts. Fantastic video, honestly one of my favorites!!

    • @KQEDDeepLook
      @KQEDDeepLook  Год назад +13

      Glad you enjoyed it!

    • @mattstyles2498
      @mattstyles2498 Год назад +4

      How did u already know this fact, enough to wonder how. But not enough to know how?
      Did some random guy passing you on the street say "fire ants turn their colonies into living rafts..."; walked off. And u have just been wondering how ever since?

    • @blueberry_borb
      @blueberry_borb Год назад +2

      @@mattstyles2498 Nah, it was Ant Man 😂

    • @pr.yanshi
      @pr.yanshi Год назад +5

      @@mattstyles2498 lolol
      Don't be so rude dude 😂😂
      Maybe they saw some fire ants floating on water like that and wondered how or why they're doing that 💁🏽‍♀️

    • @mattstyles2498
      @mattstyles2498 Год назад +2

      @@blueberry_borb well. I'll be dammed. You're right.

  • @bayleybee
    @bayleybee Год назад +19

    I don't know why but the ants being "ready to set sail" is my favourite concept on the planet. Just the phrasing. Perfect.

    • @KQEDDeepLook
      @KQEDDeepLook  Год назад +2

      Someone needs to write a sci-fi novel with this premise....

    • @shardinalwind7696
      @shardinalwind7696 6 месяцев назад

      @@KQEDDeepLookIt would probably be a sci fi horror

  • @shobanaraghuveeran
    @shobanaraghuveeran Год назад +51

    Another interesting behaviour of ants is how they carry feathers to decorate their nests. Would love a video explaining this behaviour's evolutionary sense

  • @Benson_aka_devils_advocate_88
    @Benson_aka_devils_advocate_88 Год назад +90

    The formic acid in the fire ants where I live produces a very distinct smell, one you'll not forget if every stung by one. They love moist soil, and being a pipe fitter by trade I was constantly fixing water leaks for my city. I've had the pleasure to meet these lovely little guys on more occasions than I care to remember! LoL
    Now I can smell them the moment they take up residence in my yard. Being in the desert I've never seen them in water like this but I've definitely seen them swarm on land. Really efficient at what they do, what with carrying their young and any food stuffs, always on the lookout for the next meal, even if they bite into more than they can chew!

    • @KQEDDeepLook
      @KQEDDeepLook  Год назад +11

      What does formic acid smell like? Thanks for sharing.

    • @Benson_aka_devils_advocate_88
      @Benson_aka_devils_advocate_88 Год назад +4

      @@KQEDDeepLook It's very distinct, but one I can't compare to anything else. A really bad chemical smell is really the only way I know how to explain it. I've just had the pleasure of getting covered in them on numerous occasions, but when a city block is out of water you can't wait around on pest control sooo the work goes on.
      To be honest I have pointed the smell out to people. It wasn't until I grabbed an ant and squished it in my fingers so they could smells it that they finally put the smell and ant together.

  • @Velkhana_The_Myth
    @Velkhana_The_Myth Год назад +101

    Imagine using your own babies or secrete substances from our bodies to survive a flood. How Wierd would it be for humans if we did that too?

    • @WanderTheNomad
      @WanderTheNomad Год назад +6

      I'm guessing it would be a lot more normal if human babies had the same properties as ant babies, and if our secretions had the same properties as ant secretions.

    • @FrozenMermaid666
      @FrozenMermaid666 Год назад

      Definitely nowhere near as efd as jheeting / 💨ing the most unfortunate unconsenting souls into existence thru the _ can’t / tunneIz of doom / reehrareas...

    • @FrozenMermaid666
      @FrozenMermaid666 Год назад

      ...life’s an universal error - a vicious cycle where one is ferced into a pointIs morteI worId that is uncertain and unsafe and where payn / fear / dth etc exist without one’s consent and against one’s will...

    • @FrozenMermaid666
      @FrozenMermaid666 Год назад

      ...especially hum’ns and other
      mammaIz
      which are bdg in the most sacriIegieus ways...

    • @FrozenMermaid666
      @FrozenMermaid666 Год назад

      bdg = breeding

  • @VilcxjoVakero
    @VilcxjoVakero Год назад +47

    You've done it again! What a great series

  • @longschlongjohnson6470
    @longschlongjohnson6470 Год назад +3

    On the plus side, that's the whole nest in one spot. That's why I always keep a propane torch in my flood survival kit

  • @Urkikk
    @Urkikk Год назад +5

    “If you get too close, You will regret it.”
    *casually put your whole hand on it*

  • @ezavorrr
    @ezavorrr Год назад +19

    The fire ant boat seems pretty safe for some reason.

  • @DiowE
    @DiowE Год назад +17

    Does Fire Ants rafts have to face Pirate Fire Ants rafts in their world? I want to see a sea battle between 2 opposing armada of Fire Ants.
    Great video, Deep Look. Thank you so much, i learned a lot. [DiowE]

    • @pedrochagas9903
      @pedrochagas9903 Год назад

      Colonies do fight each other very often on dry land, I don't know about a Marine fight tho. Would be cool to film that forsure.

  • @mohammedyaser1357
    @mohammedyaser1357 Год назад +3

    Props to the person who got stung.

  • @LittleBitVic
    @LittleBitVic Год назад +22

    Fellow Microbio researcher from Texas here. To the amazing, dedicated researchers putting their bodies on the line for STEM education:
    What are you DOING?!
    It is indeed a noble cause...
    But _FIRE ANTS?!_
    (I jest. I love the work you do even when every Texan bone in my body is screaming at you.)

  • @chattychatotchannel
    @chattychatotchannel Год назад +4

    That’s cool how they rotate to get a turn to breathe. I love when eusocial animals do stuff like this it just makes them feel like one huge organism it’s amazing.
    We have invasive fire ants in Australia and they are a real problem. Now we have invasive crazy ants spreading too. We have so many invasive animals here it’s a mess

  • @drsingingeagle
    @drsingingeagle Год назад +3

    Man, I love your music! The "bomp-bomp-bomps" and "bloongie-bloongie-bloongs" and "clickety-clicks" of the various instruments. I would give my eye teeth to watch the orchestra at work!

    • @KQEDDeepLook
      @KQEDDeepLook  Год назад +3

      Our music is composed by Seth Samuel, here's a video about how he makes our music: ruclips.net/video/as5vqInrwoA/видео.html

    • @drsingingeagle
      @drsingingeagle Год назад

      @@KQEDDeepLook - Thanks a million! That was like a tall strawberry milkshake on a sweltering Summer day!

  • @sandspar
    @sandspar Год назад +7

    Something to look forward to, they do more damage that lasts longer as you get older. Three bites form one ant on my back caused the glands under my arms to swell, as well as a placemat sized patch on my back, lasted three or four days. Used to get stung often, and up until I was about 50 they only made a tiny whelps like in the video.

    • @KQEDDeepLook
      @KQEDDeepLook  Год назад +5

      Eek, sandspar, sounds like you developed a serious allergic reaction. That happens with poison oak here in our region (ask me how I know).

  • @austinfreyrikrw6651
    @austinfreyrikrw6651 Год назад +7

    So, would a fire ant raft collapse if there's emulsifier (like detergent) in the water, thus reducing surface tension of H2O to near zero?

    • @gabrielaquiros1966
      @gabrielaquiros1966 Год назад +7

      Hi Austin Freyrikr W. I produced this episode of Deep Look. Yes, dropping some dishwasher soap in the water would disrupt the surface tension and cause the ant raft to fall apart. Thanks for watching! -Gabriela

  • @invisisolation
    @invisisolation Год назад +4

    Now I'm even more terrified... 😨

  • @alpacaofthemountain8760
    @alpacaofthemountain8760 5 месяцев назад

    Love the idea of “ant pirates” setting sail and setting up shop in a new location, leaving a path of destruction

  • @edwardskerl5774
    @edwardskerl5774 Год назад +2

    My sister fell off a tree into a fire ant colony. It was TERRIBLE!

  • @pikminfan6778
    @pikminfan6778 Год назад +2

    A fire ant paddles away from the scene of the crime.

  • @jaughnekow
    @jaughnekow Год назад +1

    Ants are the most interesting and terrifying in the insect's world.

  • @miru2583
    @miru2583 Год назад

    congrats on the 2m subscribers 🎉

  • @vivekshegokar6568
    @vivekshegokar6568 Год назад +1

    CONGRATS ON 2M 🎉

  • @lihaoluart
    @lihaoluart Год назад +2

    Narrator: They put them on the bottom.
    Music: What?!

    • @KQEDDeepLook
      @KQEDDeepLook  Год назад

      All Deep Look episodes have original music, composed by Seth Samuel!

  • @dindermufflin7932
    @dindermufflin7932 Год назад +1

    Imagine being in a kayak and crashing into one of these unknowingly until you just star getting stung all over and than looking around seeing millions of ants in your boat. What are you gonna do lol.

  • @binibini6972
    @binibini6972 Год назад +5

    i want someone to bite me like that 😂

  • @naturalstatenversion3484
    @naturalstatenversion3484 Год назад +2

    Witnessed this phenomenon in my backyard last year and have been trying to find a video explaining it since

    • @KQEDDeepLook
      @KQEDDeepLook  Год назад

      What happened to the ants? Did they recolonize your backyard?

    • @naturalstatenversion3484
      @naturalstatenversion3484 Год назад

      @@KQEDDeepLook the ants made rafts just like seen in your video. I was holding a waterhose on the opening of their ant pile. They eventually started floating out and a few grabbed ahold of multiple blades of grass to become stationary and the ants that continued to come out of nest would grab onto the pilesthat were being created. They grew slowly. Once most of them were evacuated out of the nest they were mostly in one or two clusters. I had a shovel and I could pick the entire pile up with the handle. They latched onto each other like stretchy velcro.

  • @irulanam2274
    @irulanam2274 Год назад

    they really know what it means to work together... just amazing

  • @amandv6756
    @amandv6756 Год назад +2

    Always here for deep look

  • @JochemTijd
    @JochemTijd Год назад +1

    That's what I call teamwork

  • @zacharywong483
    @zacharywong483 Год назад +7

    Fantastic video as always! Your footage is always so detailed and thorough!

  • @MrBrick-vb3xh
    @MrBrick-vb3xh Год назад

    i got stung by one of these when i was younger, it hurt so much i cried all the way home

  • @heartofdragon0401
    @heartofdragon0401 Год назад

    "If you get too close, you'll regret it"
    Proceeded to get close, too close.

  • @sonthems45229
    @sonthems45229 Год назад +1

    Fascinating. Truly marvellous.
    Thank you for such amazing infotainment

  • @yeeturmcbeetur8197
    @yeeturmcbeetur8197 Год назад +2

    Me, with a small drop of soap:
    😈

  • @gailstorm0817
    @gailstorm0817 Год назад +3

    What happens to the queen though?? Does she just continue birthing while they float??🤔

    • @KQEDDeepLook
      @KQEDDeepLook  Год назад +5

      She comes along on the raft as well. Good question as to whether she continues birthing.

  • @footfault1941
    @footfault1941 Год назад

    Report from the first hand experience is to be highly appreciated.
    Breakdown of a raft structure is fascinating. Missing Laura, but Deep look as ever!
    If wasp sting, why not ant? In other words, how & when wasps & bees obtained it could be explained next time ... Perhaps? (Or did ants lose it?)

  • @wildguy4773
    @wildguy4773 Год назад

    Newly adult ant:so whats my job to do
    Expert ant: *B E A B O A T*

  • @chrisvonsolomon3180
    @chrisvonsolomon3180 Год назад

    Starts raining:
    Fire Ants: alright time to make an ant raft

  • @darthlazurus4382
    @darthlazurus4382 Год назад +2

    Question.
    Where does the Queen fit in the raft? Does she still lay eggs or is that slowed or postponed during the raft stage?

    • @user-cm3td2jy4w
      @user-cm3td2jy4w Год назад +2

      I saw the ant with wings in the raft that must be the next queen or drone if in case the old queen dead .

  • @IntrepidFraidyCat
    @IntrepidFraidyCat Год назад +1

    You didn't mention the most nightmarish part! ...what happens if you or the boat you're in literally bumps into one of these rafts. I've heard horror stories. 😳

  • @bottlecapanimations5159
    @bottlecapanimations5159 7 месяцев назад

    Bro could work better in a group better than I do 😭

  • @osmosisjones4912
    @osmosisjones4912 Год назад +1

    The way ants ended was More realistic

  • @deshawnglosson6275
    @deshawnglosson6275 Год назад +1

    WAIT WAIT WAIT A MINUTE..A RAFT YALL.. 😂 😂 i thought i seen it all, but yet again. Keep up with these amazing videos. now i have to watch out for fire 🐜 just chillin in water 😂. Everyone please stay safe and blessed much love from San Antonio. Can't wait for next lesson on Deep Look

  • @lyndseystrait1513
    @lyndseystrait1513 Год назад +1

    2:48 😱😰 Absolutely NO to a fire ant pile that large! Anyways, the fact that the ants know to do this and rotate turns of who is on top is incredibly intelligent! They’re kind of amazing! I did know that sugar ants will ball together if they are drowning so that they float but I didn’t know it was this complicated for fire ants. Great video!

  • @jakimiyamizu3198
    @jakimiyamizu3198 Год назад +8

    I love deep look so much!!!❤❤❤

    • @KQEDDeepLook
      @KQEDDeepLook  Год назад +4

      Thank you JAKI, we love making these videos.

    • @jakimiyamizu3198
      @jakimiyamizu3198 Год назад +3

      @@KQEDDeepLook looking forward for more ❤❤❤

  • @eezyclsmooth9035
    @eezyclsmooth9035 Год назад +2

    I live in southern Texas where WE have always known and had a distant respect for these tiny red devils.
    Although we have been bitten hundreds and hundred of times and knew about those massive jaws.
    I NEVER KNEW they had "Stingers" as well! A mosquito, a bee. One bites one stings and that's it.
    These BITE And STING, Ouch.

  • @donone1493
    @donone1493 9 месяцев назад

    No human was hurt on the making of this video.

  • @prettypic444
    @prettypic444 Год назад +1

    moment of silence for the deep look intern

  • @ceejay8328
    @ceejay8328 Год назад

    So much respect for the person who got stung by those ants

  • @Eleora1997Msia
    @Eleora1997Msia Год назад

    teamwork is required in fire ant colony

  • @FriendlyKat
    @FriendlyKat Год назад +3

    The fact that they can be on this raft for TWO weeks is insane! Nature does fine a way!! Super cool stuff!

  • @La_Roue_Scie
    @La_Roue_Scie Год назад +2

    Fascinant, incroyable et horrifique à la fois. Leur architecture donne des vertiges. Heureusement qu'elles sont minuscules !

  • @TightyWhiteyTrash
    @TightyWhiteyTrash Год назад +4

    Yaaaassss! NEW DEEP LOOK!!! ❤

  • @telsclark
    @telsclark Год назад +3

    I love this channel

  • @micliebhart
    @micliebhart Год назад

    so we call it fire ants for a reason. their spirit lit!

  • @WolfGuy100
    @WolfGuy100 Год назад +1

    Huh, well then! Never knew that fire ants have stingers! I always thought that they just bite to inject venom but now I learned a new thing! :D

  • @kimbratton9620
    @kimbratton9620 Год назад +3

    Hey Deep Look it's always so thrilling to see a new video😃!! How about a video about the Western fence lizard?!😃

    • @KQEDDeepLook
      @KQEDDeepLook  Год назад +3

      We've thought about it, Kim, specifically about their role in the lyme disease life cycle.

  • @usaialovodua3311
    @usaialovodua3311 Год назад +1

    ants must have really good communication skills

  • @Splarkszter
    @Splarkszter Год назад +1

    as always amazing quality. thank you.

  • @soheilak6208
    @soheilak6208 Год назад +1

    I'm speechless
    I thought I know ants but now I realize they're way more complicated than what I thought...

  • @marcuscarana9240
    @marcuscarana9240 4 дня назад

    It's interesting how ants actually have wings. It's just that it remains dormant but becomes active when the newborn ant is either a drone or a queen. But really all ants have the capacity to grow wings in their dna. And so you can see that their ancestors must have been like bees until eventually the workers had no need for wings anymore so they evolved for their wing genes to become dormant for the workers.

  • @strilux.2a
    @strilux.2a Год назад

    On normal days they're fire ants, when flood come, they turn into water ants 🤣🤣🤣

  • @JinrohDFLL
    @JinrohDFLL Год назад

    makes you wonder: what's stopping them from forming a literal ant man? luckily they're not too imaginative... yet.

  • @yamz3713
    @yamz3713 Год назад

    Aw the ants locking legs is kinda cute

  • @randombro9774
    @randombro9774 Год назад +1

    My whole life realizing fire ant stings too thats why its little bit itchy and i thought they do that to grip tight

  • @comanderspartan1876
    @comanderspartan1876 Год назад +1

    Always waiting for a new amazing video!!

  • @RoverCaptain
    @RoverCaptain Год назад

    This video reminds me of the invasive Yellow Crazy Ant that is threatening to completely overwhelm the Daintree Rainforest here in Australia.
    Incredible survivalists ants are.

  • @equesdeventusoccasus
    @equesdeventusoccasus Год назад +1

    If you want to see what else fire ants can do get one of those food dishes for animals that have the water moat around them and set that up somewhere near a fire ant nest. Watch how they will build a bridge across the moat and then their workers will run back and forth across their fellow workers bodies to get it the food. They're not just raft builders, they're bridge builders.

    • @KQEDDeepLook
      @KQEDDeepLook  Год назад

      Great observation - thanks for sharing.

  • @anestismpakalis8664
    @anestismpakalis8664 Год назад +2

    i hope ur team hasa a nice dey

  • @user-rb8bl3gs9k
    @user-rb8bl3gs9k 8 месяцев назад

    That's a nice little raft you have there.. It would be a shame if someone blew it up lol

  • @anoobplayz9363
    @anoobplayz9363 Год назад +1

    They assemble faster than my school lol

  • @felixmitchell5652
    @felixmitchell5652 Год назад

    These ants evacuated better than the people at south Florida during hurricane IAN 👀

  • @anxietynova4580
    @anxietynova4580 Год назад +1

    Solenopsis Invicta

  • @marcuscarana9240
    @marcuscarana9240 Год назад

    I've known about this for a long time now watching this strange ant formation from Nat Geo and Discovery Channel, and it is truly a fascinating phenomenon so I'm a bit surprised that it has taken Deep Look this long to make a video about it. Deep look has always been able to showcase the most bizarre and amazing phenomenons in the insect world so I'm a bit surprised it took them this long to make a video for this one. Like this video should have been one of their first.

    • @gabrielaquiros1966
      @gabrielaquiros1966 Год назад +3

      Hi Marcus Carana. I produced this episode of Deep Look. Thanks for writing. Deep Look is produced in Northern California and we mainly focus on local fauna and flora. We have very few red fire ants here. Deep Look doesn't travel often, but in August we had the opportunity to film this story in Atlanta, where red fire ants are abundant. Cheers, Gabriela

    • @velhesvalden1309
      @velhesvalden1309 Год назад

      I'm a person who didn't knew about this before watching my favorite channel of small creatures world.

  • @Emcron
    @Emcron Год назад

    this is like a freaky case of water not being fire's weakness lol

  • @gaminglol1167
    @gaminglol1167 Год назад

    One time in kindergarten I stuck my hand in a fire ant pile and I only started to get them off when they started biting

  • @peachdiary499
    @peachdiary499 Год назад +2

    I learned alot thx!

  • @danieltabin6470
    @danieltabin6470 Год назад

    More of these! The shorts are too short!

  • @judasthepious1499
    @judasthepious1499 Год назад

    fire ants using their babies as a floating raft..
    humans : hmm.. interesting.. maybe we could try that 🤔

  • @NewMessage
    @NewMessage Год назад +1

    And.... this is why I don't watch YT vids in the bath anymore.

  • @alexlee4806
    @alexlee4806 Год назад

    I have stepped on more than one fire ant nests back when i was a kid and boy were they painful

  • @torterratortellini6641
    @torterratortellini6641 Год назад

    3:20 I just assumed they would start cannibalizing if they got hungry.

  • @Syrio_Edits
    @Syrio_Edits 10 месяцев назад

    Fun fact:Fire ants are several species of ants in the genus Solenopsis, which includes over 200 species. Solenopsis are stinging ants, and most of their common names reflect this, for example, ginger ants and tropical fire ants. Many of the names shared by this genus are often used interchangeably to refer to other species of ant, such as the term red ant, mostly because of their similar coloration despite not being in the genus Solenopsis. Both Myrmica rubra and Pogonomyrmex barbatus are common examples of non-Solenopsis ants being termed red ants.[2]

  • @TommysGreatRevenge
    @TommysGreatRevenge Год назад

    I actually didn't know they stung, I thought they only bit the skin very hard, very interesting!

  • @yriyahyriyah30s
    @yriyahyriyah30s Год назад

    Ants are brilliant

  • @berdwatcher5125
    @berdwatcher5125 Год назад

    The only fire imune to water

  • @Lfppfs
    @Lfppfs Год назад

    Awesome video, as always!

  • @mattstyles2498
    @mattstyles2498 Год назад +1

    I seen in a bucket of water ants using dead bodies from other ant and bugs to make a life raft.