Flying Ant Day: When Winged Ants Take Their Nuptial Flight

Female winged ant and a smaller male winged ant on a spider web

Mating flying ants caught in a spider’s web. Image © Daniele Benucci (Camponotus Vagus) via Flickr, cropped from original, licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0

British wildlifeFlying ant day: When winged ants take their nuptial flight

By Lisa Hendry

Each summer, there comes a moment when we suddenly notice that the ground is crawling with large, winged ants. Then the air seems to be full of them and we find ourselves ducking and diving, trying not to get them in our mouths or hair.

So, what causes this simultaneous taking to the air, and is there really such a thing as flying ant day? Find out when and why ants grow wings and swarm.

What are flying ants?

Flying ants are known as alates. In the UK, particularly in urban areas, the winged insects you see are almost always the sexually mature queens and males of the black garden ant, Lasius niger. The larger ants are the queens. They can be up to 15 millimetres long.

Winged ants on a building

Black garden ants, Lasius niger. The queens are much larger than the worker ants. Image © JvL via Flickr, licensed under CC BY 2.0

When is flying ant day?

This annual swarming event usually occurs in July or August and coincides with a period of hot and humid weather. Winged ants appear at different times around the country and local weather conditions are critical for the coordination of swarming activity.

Ants tend to fly earlier in urban areas than rural areas, probably because temperatures are generally warmer in urban environments, known as the urban heat island effect.

Winged black ants crawling around a crack in a pavement with their transluscent wings folded over their backs

In summer, a spell of good weather often leads to sightings of winged ants, called alates, which emerge from their nests. Image © Clint Budd via Flickr, licensed under CC BY 2.0

It can be unfortunate timing for tennis players at Wimbledon. There are years when flying ants plague players during their matches, causing so much disruption it makes the news. However, swarms of flying ants can appear any time between June and the start of September.

A multi-year citizen science project by the Royal Society of Biology found that the widely held idea of a ‘flying ant day’ is actually a misconception: there’s no single day when ants fly all at once. Rather, there’s a ‘flying ant season’. Winged ants actually emerge over several weeks, although there are often several peaks in appearances, each lasting only a few days. The precise pattern of swarming varies from year to year.

Swarming is triggered by the weather: the study found that ants only flew on days when it was warm, not windy and conditions had improved compared to the previous day.

There’s also anecdotal evidence that flying ant days often occur after some summer rain.

Suzanne Ryder, our Senior Curator in Charge of Hymenoptera, explains the phenomenon of flying ant day.

Where do flying ants come from?

Prior to swarming, ants are going about their everyday business and living in a colony in a nest.

Black garden ants nest in dry soil. You’ll often find them in flower beds and lawns, and under paving slabs or stones. Patios are a favoured location. They’re common in almost any dry, open area that is warmed by sunlight – including gardens, pavements, brownfield sites, heathland, grassland and coastal areas.

In the few weeks before the swarming event happens, you may see heaps of soil appearing above the nests.

Exposed ant nest built in gritty soil, showing a few black ants walking across a pile of pale, oblong pupae

A Lasius niger ant nest that has been exposed when a paving slab was moved. Worker ants and pupae are visible. Image © Marcus33 via Wikimedia Commons, licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0

Ants live in a caste system, where individuals have specific jobs. The queen lays the eggs while female workers look after the queen, eggs and larvae. They also gather food, enlarge the nest and otherwise ensure the colony runs smoothly. Most of the eggs develop into workers, but when the colony is ready, the queen begins to produce virgin queens and males.

When the winged males, called drones, and virgin queens, known as princesses, emerge from the nest, they scatter. This maximises the chance of mating between different colonies and reduce inbreeding.

Why do ants fly?

An ant colony can only expand so much. At some point a new queen will need to strike out on her own to begin a new colony. She needs to meet and mate with a male from a different colony and find a new area in which to start building her nest. Growing wings and flying enables her to do this.

So each year, alates emerge from nests and take flight. They aren’t interested in people or picnics – they’re just looking for a mate.

The large, winged females and the smaller, winged males are often seen flying joined together. This is known as the nuptial flight.

Lots of winged black ants crawling over each other in a corner between brick walls

Winged ants appear in huge numbers when conditions are right. This maximises the chance of successful mating encounters and survival. Image © Ozzy Delaney via Flickr, licensed under CC BY 2.0

Why do ants swarm?

Why do flying ants appear in such large numbers all at once? One reason is that this gives them protection from predators. There really is safety in numbers.

Another reason to swarm is to increase the chance of reproduction – with larger numbers of their species around the ants won’t have far to look for a mate.

During this brief, once-in-a-lifetime mating period, a queen usually mates with several males.

What happens after the nuptial flight?

Once ants have mated, the role of the males is over. The mated queens quickly chew off their own wings and begin looking for a suitable site in which to nest and set up a new colony. This is why you often see large ants walking around after a ‘flying ant day’ and may even see discarded wings scattered over pavements.

Close up of a large queen ant that no longer has wings

This Lasius niger queen has chewed off her wings after mating. Image © Jens Buurgaard Nielsen via Wikimedia Commons, licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0

The ants you see the rest of the year are female workers, gathering food for the colony.

Once the queen has found a suitable site, she digs herself an underground chamber and lays her first few eggs, which she rears to adulthood. She won’t eat for weeks – not until her first brood of daughter workers are ready to forage for food for her.

The stock of sperm the queen received during the nuptial flight will enable her to lay fertilised eggs for the rest of her lifetime. And she has many egg-laying years ahead of her, often reproducing until a colony is thousands strong – large nests can have more than 20,000 workers.

How long do flying ants live?

Males don’t do any work in the nest and are only produced by their colony during flying ant season. They develop from unfertilised eggs. After the nuptial flight, the male ants usually only live for another day or two, so not much more than a week in total. Their sole reason for existence is to mate with new queens.

Lasius niger queens can generally live for up to 15 years, although L. niger queens in captivity have reached 28 years. But they spend most of their lives in their nest. They only spend a small portion of their lives as winged or flying ants – when they’re young queens that need to establish a new colony of their own.

Why flying ants are actually a good thing

These flying insects may seem annoying to some people, but their tunnelling activities play a vital role in improving soil quality.

Their swarming events also provide a vital food resource for many species of birds. Swifts and gulls can often be seen feeding frenziedly from rising swarms of ants.

Three flying seagulls

Flying ant day provides a feast for many animals, including gulls. Image from Pixabay, available under CC0.

The black garden ant and the related cornfield ant, Lasius alienus, are particularly important to the continued survival on heathland of the silver-studded blue butterfly, Plebejus argus. Populations of this attractive butterfly have declined across most of its range.

The ants and the butterfly have developed a mutually beneficial relationship. The ants tend the caterpillars, protecting them from predators. In return, the ants feed on secretions produced by the caterpillars.

A few ants on a brown, stripy Plebejus argus caterpillar

Lasius ants protect caterpillars of the silver-studded blue butterfly, Plebejus argus, in return for food. Image © Dietrich Sommerfeld via Wikimedia Commons, licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 DE

Ants in the UK

Ants, along with bees and wasps, belong to the insect group called Hymenoptera. They are recognised by their three fairly distinct body parts.

There are about 60 species of ant in the UK, and they all live in complex colonies.

Do red ants fly?

The nuptial flight is an important phase in most – but not all – ant species’ reproduction. Red ants, Myrmica rubra, are among the other common ant species in Britain that grow wings and swarm. However, in the flying ant surveys run by the Royal Society of Biology, nearly 90% of the winged ants seen were black garden ants, Lasius niger, also often called the common black ant.

Close-up of a reddish-brown, winged ant on a blade of grass

Winged ant of the species Myrmica rubra, a common red ant in Britain. Image © AfroBrazilian via Wikimedia Commons, licensed under CC BY SA 4.0

The types of ant you see flying will depend on where you are. For example, in woodland you may see wood ants.

All ants need good weather to fly, with no rain or wind. The temperature and humidity that triggers swarming and flight is different for each species, so the timings of their nuptial flights will vary.

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