What does not kill you makes you peaceful: non-lethal fungal infection could reduce aggression towards strangers in ants

Research Square (Research Square)(2022)

Cited 0|Views0
No score
Abstract
Abstract Many parasites interfere with the behaviour of their hosts. In social animals, such as ants, parasitic interference can cause changes on the level of the individual and also on the level of the society. The ant-parasitic fungus Rickia wasmannii influences the behaviour of Myrmica ants by expanding the host’s nestmate recognition template, thereby increasing the chance of the colony accepting infected non-nestmates. Infected ants consistently show an increase of the alkane tricosane (n-C23) in their cuticular hydrocarbon profiles. Although experimental application of single compounds often elicits aggression towards manipulated ants, we hypothesized that the increase of n-C23 might underlie the facilitated acceptance of infected non-nestmates. To test this, we mimicked fungal infection in M. scabrinodis by applying synthetic n-C23 to fresh ant corpses and observing the reaction of infected and uninfected workers to control and manipulated corpses. Infected ants appeared to be more peaceful towards infected but not uninfected non-nestmates. Adding n-C23 to uninfected corpses resulted in reduced aggression by uninfected ants. This supports the hypothesis that n-C23 acts as a “pacifying” signal. Parasitic interference with the nestmate discrimination of host ants might eventually change colony structure by increasing genetic heterogeneity and thus might significantly affect social evolution.
More
Translated text
Key words
ants,aggression,infection,non-lethal
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined