how ants don’t just drown when it rains.

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Particularly when it rains fairly heavily. I mean their colonies are just a network of unground tunnels. One would assume they’d just fill with water.

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Anonymous 0 Comments

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Anonymous 0 Comments

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Anonymous 0 Comments

The ants take refuge on my kitchen bench and sometimes the wall a day or two Before the rains come.

I know when a big rain is coming because they carry all their eggs up and hang out. I just leave them alone if they’re not in the way.

After it finished raining they go away again by themselves. I suppose they check their chambers are not flooded and move every thing back again.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Ants take active measures to protect themselves from excessive water. Such a special purpose built tunnels to channel waters downwards and quickly drain.

Anonymous 0 Comments

The holes they breathe through are smaller than water can get into due to its surface tension.

If you’ve noticed, ant hills tend to “pop up” after a rain. The vast majority of the ant colony is underground but when it rains they move upwards to prevent the colony from becoming inundated.