How Ants Survive Drowning by Slowing Their Own Metabolism
March 28, 2026 ยท 4 min read
The Fact
Some ants can survive being submerged in water for over 24 hours by drastically lowering their metabolic rate.
Surviving the Flood
Tropical forests flood with remarkable regularity, and forest-floor ant colonies face periodic inundation as a routine environmental hazard rather than a catastrophic exception. In the Amazon basin, for example, entire forest regions flood for months at a time during the wet season. The ant species that have evolved in these flood-prone environments have developed physiological responses to submersion that would be lethal for most insects but that these ants endure as a matter of course.
The key mechanism is metabolic depression โ a controlled reduction in the rate of all biochemical processes that consume oxygen, allowing the ant to survive on dramatically reduced oxygen supplies for extended periods. Research published in PLOS ONE documented specific ant species surviving submersion for over 24 hours with high recovery rates, making this one of the more dramatic examples of hypoxia tolerance in any invertebrate species.
What Metabolic Depression Actually Means
Normal metabolism keeps cells alive through a continuous cycle of oxygen-consuming biochemical reactions that generate ATP, the cell's energy currency. If oxygen supply drops, this aerobic metabolism fails and cells begin to die within minutes in most animals. The human brain, for example, begins to suffer irreversible damage after three to four minutes without oxygen.
Metabolic depression is the biological equivalent of putting the entire cellular machinery on standby. The rates of virtually all biochemical reactions slow dramatically โ the consumption of oxygen and the production of carbon dioxide drop to a small fraction of normal levels. The cells switch partially to anaerobic metabolism (generating energy without oxygen) to maintain minimal function, while simultaneously reducing the rate of processes that consume energy.
This is not unique to ants. Many aquatic invertebrates โ including some bivalves and intertidal crabs โ use metabolic depression to survive periods of hypoxia or air exposure at low tide. Some insects enter a form of metabolic depression called diapause during winter to survive cold and food scarcity. What is notable about flood-tolerant ant species is that they appear to be able to enter this state relatively rapidly in response to submersion, rather than requiring weeks of preparatory physiological change.
Life Rafts and Collective Survival
Metabolic depression is not the only ant solution to flooding. Army ants (Eciton species) in the Amazon are famous for their collective response to rising water: workers link their bodies together using interlocking tarsal claws, forming living rafts that float on the water surface. The queens and larvae are kept in the center of the raft, above water level, while the outermost workers make contact with the water, remaining alive for hours through a combination of trapped air bubbles in their body hairs and the metabolic depression described above.
The rafts are not passive โ they actively reshape in response to currents and contact with obstacles, and they navigate toward dry ground when available. This collective behavior emerges without central coordination: each worker responds to stimuli from its neighbors and the environment according to simple rules, but the result at the colony level is a sophisticated adaptive response to a potentially lethal environmental challenge.
Fire ants (Solenopsis invicta) use a similar strategy and have been studied extensively because their invasive spread across the southeastern United States means that flood resilience directly affects how they survive and spread into new territories. Their ability to form floating colonies that drift across waterways has contributed to their ecological success as invaders.
The Broader Significance
The ability of some ant species to survive submersion for extended periods through metabolic depression is one example of a broader set of physiological adaptations that make ants among the most environmentally resilient insects on Earth. Ants inhabit every terrestrial continent except Antarctica, survive in deserts where temperatures exceed 60 degrees Celsius, thrive in the perpetually flooded forest floors of tropical wetlands, and maintain colonies at elevations above 4,000 meters.
This environmental range โ broader than any other single insect group โ reflects millions of years of adaptive evolution in hundreds of distinct lineages, each finding solutions to the specific physiological challenges of its habitat. Metabolic depression in response to submersion is one such solution, elegant in its simplicity and remarkable in its effectiveness.
FactOTD Editorial Team
Published March 28, 2026 ยท 4 min read
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