For years, scientists have wondered how fire ants, whose bodies are
denser than water, can survive floods that should destroy them. How do entire
colonies form themselves into life rafts that can float for weeks? A Los Angeles
Times article explained that engineers from the Georgia Institute of
Technology discovered that tiny hairs on the ants’ bodies trap air bubbles.
This enables thousands of the insects, “which flounder and struggle in the
water as individuals,” to ride out the flood when they cling together.
Alone, we sink; but clinging and growing together in God, we can ride out every storm. (RBC)