Don’t miss a thing! Sign up to the Daily Star’s newsletter

Crazed hordes of drugged horny seagulls will make this summer hell.

Brits and holidaymakers are being warned they will be terrorised by swarms of the monster birds – high as kites after gorging on billions of flying ants.

Experts say the pests could lose all inhibitions and become ‘acid heads’ as the insects contain formic acid that makes them act out of their minds.

READ MORE: Extremely rare two-headed snake stuns serpent wrangler in strange discovery

A spokesman for the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds warned about the looming ant plague: “Seagulls are mad for them – they are like M&Ms to them.

“The gulls go wherever they are.”

A spokeswoman from the Society of Biology added the ants’ formic acid can cause gulls to “appear drunk or stoned” and make them even bolder.

As well as making the gulls hungry and horny, ingesting the insects is also said to make gulls increase dive-bombing attacks and refuse to fly away from the humans they leave in a flap.

The phenomenon of flying ant swarms up to 50 miles wide invading the UK in hot weather has been dubbed ‘Flying Ant Day’.

Their swarms have grown so large they are being spotted from space.

It usually happens in July or August amid a sustained stretch of hot, still and humid weather.

Infestations can be focused on seaside towns where gulls are already despised for dive bombing to snatch food and attack kids, pets and pensioners.

READ NEXT:

  • Young mum shot dead in 'execution-style' murder as she pushed pram down busy street

  • Babysitter and cop 'sexually assaulted' 12-year-old girl and took naked photos of her

  • Man breaks his neck after being thrown into back of police van without seatbelts

  • Woman killed driving Uber Eats car may have 'solved her own murder' with final photo

  • Teenage swimmers make sickening discovery in murky waters of dangerous lake

  • Animals
  • UK Weather

Source: Read Full Article