soldanr… thumbnail look at an old Cessna wing design.
I was the investigating engineer for an O-2 [C-337] that broke-up in-flight due to over-load. Failure of the Lt Wing occurred thru the landing light "cut-out" on the LE. This wing failure was complicated by multiple factors... and failed "way-above" design ultimate loads (pilot error).
As for "weaker"... that is relative... the "stock" C-337 wing withstood 4.3-g pull-outs for thousands of hours with relatively few ill-effects (routine/rough maintenance practices appeared to abuse the wing worse than high-G loading).
Obviously, there are probably two factors that have driven Cessna to put landing/taxi lights in the cowl of newer high wing acft: reduced complexity of the light instl; and reduced complexity of wing assembly (symmetrical structural configuration).
Also, I was lead engineer for tear down inspection of a USAF T-41 (C-172) trainer at 20,000-Hrs... minor damage... mostly related to corrosion... and some buckling. Wings appeared in good condition... including leading-edges at landing light cutout.
NOTE: low-wing GA Acft that regularly fly pipeline inspections take the "worst” beating... having experienced several wing failures (spar) due to fatigue cracking.
Regards, Wil Taylor