Did you know that Sick Birds Lie in Ant Hills and It’s No Accident?

When illness strikes, some birds don’t fly to safety they fly to ants.

Crows, upon sensing they're sick or infested with parasites, have been observed performing an extraordinary act of instinctive self-care: they land near swarms of ants, spread their wings, and stay still inviting the insects to crawl all over their bodies.

This behavior, called “anting,” is far from random. The ants release formic acid, a natural substance with antimicrobial and antiparasitic properties. By allowing ants to roam through their feathers, birds receive a kind of natural chemical bath one that helps them fight bacteria, fungi, mites, and skin irritations without any human help.

And it's not just crows. Dozens of bird species engage in anting, proving that nature itself offers remedies if you know where to look.

This is more than a survival tactic. It’s a living demonstration of how wildlife instinctively taps into Earth’s pharmacy. No prescriptions. No science labs. Just millennia of adaptation encoded in behavior.

When birds lie in ants, they’re not giving up they’re healing. 🐜