How a Crow’s Healing Ritual Can Depend on Active Ant Hills

When a crow feels sick… it visits an anthill.


Sounds strange? It’s actually one of nature’s most fascinating healing rituals.


When a crow senses it’s unwell, it will intentionally find an anthill, spread its wings wide, and remain completely still—waiting for the ants to crawl into its feathers.


Why?

Because ants release formic acid—a natural antiseptic that kills bacteria, fungi, and parasites hiding in the bird’s feathers.

This behavior is called “anting”, and it’s been observed not just in crows, but in many bird species.

No medicine.

No vet.

Just pure instinct and nature’s built-in pharmacy.

A brilliant reminder that the natural world is full of intelligent, self-healing systems…

We just need to stop and notice.

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15 comments

  1. Formic acid is the substance that make any insect that bites you, sting. I wonder, do the ants just bite and gobble up stuff in the feathers, or do they bite the bird’s skin too, like an injection that can actually cleanse the system? I know that bee stings are used by some people who suffer from arthritis; my neighbor kept bees and did that; he said it helped a lot. If so, I salute those crows for taking their medicine unflinchingly. Amazing.

    Liked by 3 people

  2. Holy Crap, Jack. Ain’t no way when I feel sick, I’m lying on a fire ant bed, those little bastards will kill me within ten minutes. I have Crows that visit the bird feeder every day. Always big and pushy, but such a nice diversion. I put out a shiny quarter for them, and the next day I found a dime. What did the Crow spend the fifteen cents on?

    Liked by 4 people

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