Research

Stretching Ant Rafts

A raft of fire ants after a flood.

In their natural habitat, fire ants experience frequent floods and so developed the ability to form rafts. Entire colonies will float out a flood in a two-ant-thick raft anchored to whatever vegetation they can find. Because ants in the upper layer of the raft are constantly milling about, the rafts have some ability to “self-heal” as they’re stretched.

Pulling slowly gives the ants time to "heal" their stretching raft.
Pulling slowly gives the ants time to “heal” their stretching raft.

In these experiments, researchers slowly (above) and quickly (below) stretched ant rafts to see how they responded. Given a slow enough stretch, the ants were able to adjust and keep the raft together until it doubled in length. In contrast, a faster stretching rate overwhelmed the raft by the time it was 30% longer. (Image credit: top – Wikimedia Commons, others – C. Chen et al.; research credit: C. Chen et al.; via APS Physics)

Pulling quickly breaks an ant raft because the ants cannot react quickly enough to heal the raft.
Pulling quickly breaks an ant raft because the ants cannot react fast enough to heal the raft.
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