Foitzik S, Herbers J M
Department of Biology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins 80523, USA.
Evolution. 2001 Feb;55(2):316-23. doi: 10.1111/j.0014-3820.2001.tb01296.x.
The parasite pressure exerted by the slavemaker ant Protomognathus americanus on its host species Leptothorax longispinosus was analyzed demographically and genetically. The origin of slaves found in colonies of the obligate slavemaker was examined with nuclear and mitochondrial DNA markers to make inferences about the frequency and severity of slave raids. Relatedness of enslaved L. longispinosus workers in the same nest was very low, and our data suggest that, on average, each slavemaker nest raids six host colonies per season. Therefore, the influence of slavemaker species on their hosts is much stronger than simple numerical ratios suggest. We also found that slave relatedness was higher in small than in large slavemaker nests; thus, larger nests wield a much stronger influence on the host. We estimated that in the study population, on average, a host nest has a 50% chance of being attacked by a slavemaker colony per year. Free-living Leptothorax colonies in the vicinity of slavemaker nests did not represent the source of slaves working in P. americanus colonies, which suggests that raided nests either do not survive or migrate after being raided. Colony composition and intranest relatedness of free-living L. longispinosus colonies differed markedly between areas with slavemakers and those that are parasite-free. In the presence of slavemakers, host colonies were less likely to be polygynous and had fewer workers and a higher relatedness among worker brood. Host nests with slavemaker neighbors allocated more resources into sexuals, possibly caused by these shifts in nest demography. Finally, enslaved Leptothorax workers in P. americanus nests appeared to be less efficient than their counterparts in free-living colonies. Thus, slavemakers exert a much stronger impact on their hosts than had previously been suspected and represent an unique system to study parasite-host coevolution.
对奴役蚁美洲原颚蚁(Protomognathus americanus)对其寄主物种长刺细胸蚁(Leptothorax longispinosus)施加的寄生压力进行了种群统计学和遗传学分析。利用核DNA和线粒体DNA标记检查了专性奴役蚁蚁群中发现的奴隶的来源,以推断奴隶袭击的频率和严重程度。同一巢穴中被奴役的长刺细胸蚁工蚁之间的亲缘关系非常低,我们的数据表明,平均而言,每个奴役蚁巢穴每个季节会袭击6个寄主蚁群。因此,奴役蚁物种对其寄主的影响比简单的数量比例所显示的要强烈得多。我们还发现,在小型奴役蚁巢穴中,奴隶之间的亲缘关系比大型巢穴中的更高;因此,较大的巢穴对寄主的影响要大得多。我们估计,在研究种群中,平均而言,一个寄主蚁巢每年有50%的机会受到奴役蚁蚁群的攻击。奴役蚁巢穴附近的自由生活的长刺细胸蚁蚁群并不是美洲原颚蚁蚁群中工作的奴隶的来源,这表明被袭击的蚁巢要么无法存活,要么在被袭击后迁移。有奴役蚁的地区和无寄生生物的地区,自由生活的长刺细胸蚁蚁群的蚁群组成和巢内亲缘关系存在显著差异。在有奴役蚁的情况下,寄主蚁群多雌型的可能性较小,工蚁数量较少,工蚁幼虫之间的亲缘关系较高。有奴役蚁邻居的寄主蚁巢会将更多资源分配给有性个体,这可能是由巢内种群统计学的这些变化导致的。最后,美洲原颚蚁蚁巢中被奴役的长刺细胸蚁工蚁似乎比自由生活蚁群中的同类效率更低。因此,奴役蚁对其寄主的影响比之前怀疑的要强烈得多,代表了一个研究寄生虫 -寄主协同进化的独特系统。