The highly-organised ants were captured on camera in Brazil by electrical engineer, Francisco Boni.
The Brazilian wrote on Twitter: “Attack of legionary ants (also known as army ants or marabunta) to a wasp honeycomb.
"Impressive the level of swarm intelligence and collective computation to form that bridge.”
The footage has since been viewed almost 200,000 times.
It has gained thousands of retweets and likes.
He added: "When this type of attack happens, the wasps usually escape and the ants do not leave until they've completely looted the honeycomb, carrying pupae, larvae, and eggs, as well as some adults who did not manage to escape.
"They can even build across the water!"
He explained the use of the bridge for the ants, saying: "For ants it is more effective to follow the trail over a bridge that goes down and then up than in an inverted upside down walk.
"Also likely that upside down the ants can't carry significant loads."
"Legionary ants" is a term that covers over 200 ant species.
They are generally characterised by their aggressive foraging techniques – such as the one in the video.
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