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Hurricane Harvey's Stinging Nightmare: Floating Fire Ant Colonies

"What fresh hell is this?"
LOADINGERROR LOADING

As if the catastrophic floods in Houston haven’t done enough damage, people are now reporting large colonies of fire ants floating on the rising water.

These fire ants, which are infamous for their painful bites, appear to have an outrageous survival mechanism. And, frankly, it’s unsettling.

Individual fire ants have a slight resistance to water, but that resistance becomes much stronger when they work together. Colonies will link together to stay afloat even in the severe flooding Texas is experiencing.

“They use the wax together on their bodies to keep the queen and other members of the colony in the middle of the ball dry so they don’t suffocate,” Mike Merchant, entomology specialist at the Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service, told Wired. As they float along, the insects change their positions within the pack to help prevent drowning.

People are thoroughly disturbed by what Mother Nature hath wrought.

Pro tip: Don't touch the floating fire ant colonies. They will ruin your day. #Harvey pic.twitter.com/uwJd0rA7qB

— Mike Hixenbaugh (@Mike_Hixenbaugh) August 27, 2017

What fresh hell is this

— ((Jen Quist)) (@QuistJennifer) August 28, 2017

It looks like dirt, but it's ACTUALLY FUCKING ANTS. GODDAMN HARVEY COULDN'T YOU AT LEAST KILL THE FUCKING FIRE ANTS? #HurricaneHarvey pic.twitter.com/3zQMTtq9f3

— Robert Junior Jr. (@RobertJuniorJr) August 28, 2017

Had a golf ball size group wash up on my foot during flooding near Austin. Screamed like a b and ran home to a fistful of Benadryl.

— eric westpheling (@ericwestpheling) August 28, 2017

This is why you don’t dork around in flood waters. Floating pile of fire ants from a local retention pond #Harvey pic.twitter.com/MwFQmfrP38

— Jon Ruder (@JRuder1) August 27, 2017

Oh, look-it's all of my childhood nightmares wrapped into one video. Thanks, internets.

— John Henderson (@4EmploymentLaw) August 27, 2017

I almost died from looking at this.

— Mickey Fickey (@mrd125) August 27, 2017

Floating fire ants aren’t a particularly new phenomenon, but that doesn’t make it any less horrifying.

Have a little mercy, won’t you, Mother Nature?

Clarification: Language has been added to more accurately describe how the colonies stay afloat.

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