Leafcutter ants can carry objects 50 times their own body weight
Leafcutter ants have neck joints strong enough to withstand forces 5,000 times their body weight. They regularly carry leaf fragments 10–50 times their own mass, equivalent to a human carrying a Volkswagen Beetle in their teeth. The leaves are not for eating — they're for growing fungus underground, which is the colony's actual food source. A mature leafcutter colony farms a continuous fungal garden and can strip an entire tree of its leaves in less than 24 hours, with workers operating in a relay system along established foraging trails.
Strength proportional to body weight is something humans use constantly as a benchmark — 'pound for pound, the strongest animal'. Leafcutter ants dismantle that framework by operating at scales that have no human equivalent.
“Leafcutter ants carry objects 50× their body weight — equivalent to a human lifting a Volkswagen in their teeth. And they're just carrying leaves to grow fungus, not even to eat directly. 🐜 #OddlyHuman”