Honeypot ants are a unique insect that use their own bodies as living storage pots of honey.
Honeypot Ants: The Insects That Become Living Honey Jars
Imagine volunteering for a job where you'd spend the rest of your life hanging from the ceiling with your belly swollen to the size of a grape. That's exactly what certain worker ants do in honeypot ant colonies, and it's one of nature's most bizarre survival strategies.
Deep underground in arid regions of North America, Australia, and Africa, colonies of honeypot ants maintain what can only be described as a living larder. Specialized workers called repletes serve as the colony's food storage system, allowing their bodies to become grotesquely swollen with liquid food.
How Does an Ant Become a Honey Jar?
The transformation begins when worker ants identify their largest sisters for this unique role. These selected ants are fed nectar and honeydew drop by drop until their abdomens balloon to several times their normal size—sometimes holding liquid equal to several times their body weight.
The liquid flows into a special pouch called the crop, which expands like a water balloon. As the replete swells, the hard protective plates on its abdomen separate from each other, connected only by the stretched membrane between them. Eventually, these ants become so engorged they can barely move, spending their lives clinging upside-down to the nest ceiling like living chandeliers.
A Pantry You Can Tap On Demand
When food becomes scarce, worker ants don't need to venture outside. They simply approach a replete and stroke its antennae, triggering the swollen ant to regurgitate some of its stored liquid. It's like having a living vending machine that dispenses food on request.
This system is brilliant for survival in harsh, unpredictable environments where food sources are seasonal. During times of plenty, the colony stockpiles resources in these living containers. During droughts or winter months, they tap into their reserves without risking foragers in dangerous conditions.
Not Just Sweet—Surprisingly Medicinal
Recent research published in 2025 revealed something unexpected: the liquid stored in honeypot ants has powerful antimicrobial properties. Scientists found it effectively kills common pathogens including Staphylococcus aureus bacteria and inhibits fungal growth.
This discovery suggests the stored liquid isn't just food—it may also serve as medicine for the colony, protecting both the repletes and the nest from infections.
Indigenous peoples in Australia have long considered honeypot ants a delicacy, harvesting them for their sweet, honey-like taste. The ants are eaten whole, with the swollen abdomen bursting in the mouth like a tiny, natural candy. For desert communities with limited access to sweets, these living honey pots were a treasured seasonal treat.
The honeypot ant's strategy raises fascinating questions: Do the repletes experience their immobile existence differently than mobile workers? How does the colony decide which ants get this permanent assignment? And could their antimicrobial honey inspire new medical treatments?
Nature has invented countless ways to store food—from squirrels burying nuts to bees building wax combs. But turning your own family members into living, breathing storage jars might be the strangest solution of all.