Ants Build Raft to Escape Flood, Biologists Say

Feb 21, 2014 by News Staff

A group of scientists from Switzerland say that the floodplain-dwelling ants (Formica selysi), when facing a flood, build rafts and use both the buoyancy of the brood and the recovery ability of workers to minimize injury. Furthermore, the queen ant is placed in the middle and protected on all sides by the rafting ants.

The floodplain-dwelling ants, Formica selysi, building a raft. Image credit: Purcell J et al.

The floodplain-dwelling ants, Formica selysi, building a raft. Image credit: Purcell J et al.

When put in harm’s way, social animals are often able to work together to enhance the survival and welfare of the group.

The floodplain-dwelling ants are known to link to together to create rafts during floods, but less is known about the composition, shape, and social structure, if any, of these rafts.

To better understand this process, Dr Michel Chapuisat from the University of Lausanne with colleagues collected ants from a flood plain in Switzerland and brought them back to the lab so they could induce flooding in ant populations containing different combinations of worker ants, queens, and broods.

During the ‘flooding,’ they observed where the workers, brood, and queens were positioned in the raft.

The flooding also allowed them to observe the buoyancy and recovery ability of the worker ants and brood.

The scientists found that the worker ants and brood were extremely resistant to submersion. The workers protected the most vulnerable and valuable nest mate, the queen, by placing her in the center of the raft, and the worker ants used the buoyancy of the brood at the base and recovery ability of workers to create a raft and minimize ant injury.

Both workers and brood exhibited high survival rates after they rafted, which suggests that occupying the base of the raft is not as deadly as scientists expected. Placing the brood at the base of the raft may also aid in keeping the nest together during the flood.

“We expected that individuals submerged on the base of the raft would face the highest cost, so we were astonished to see the ants systematically place the youngest colony members in that positions,” said Dr Jessica Purcell from University of Lausanne, who is the first author of a paper published in the open-access journal PLoS ONE.

“Further experiments revealed that the brood are the most buoyant members of the society and that rafting does not decrease their survival; thus, this configuration benefits the group at minimal cost.”

______

Purcell J et al. 2014. Ant Brood Function as Life Preservers during Floods. PLoS ONE 9 (2): e89211; doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0089211

Share This Page