Hart Adam G, Bot A N M, Brown Mark J F
Department of Animal and Plant Sciences, University of Sheffield, UK.
Naturwissenschaften. 2002 Jun;89(6):275-7. doi: 10.1007/s00114-002-0316-0.
Parasites and pathogens often impose significant costs on their hosts. This is particularly true for social organisms, where the genetic structure of groups and the accumulation of contaminated waste facilitate disease transmission. In response, hosts have evolved many mechanisms of defence against parasites. Here we present evidence that Atta colombica, a leaf-cutting ant, may combat Escovopsis, a dangerous parasite of Atta's garden fungus, through a colony-level behavioural response. In A. colombica, garden waste is removed from within the colony and transported to the midden--an external waste dump--where it is processed by a group of midden workers. We found that colonies infected with Escovopsis have higher numbers of workers on the midden, where Escovopsis is deposited. Further, midden workers are highly effective in dispersing newly deposited waste away from the dumping site. Thus, the colony-level task allocation strategies of the Atta superorganism may change in response to the threat of disease to a third, essential party.
寄生虫和病原体常常会给它们的宿主带来巨大代价。对于社会性生物来说尤其如此,在社会性生物群体中,群体的遗传结构以及受污染废物的积累会促进疾病传播。作为应对措施,宿主进化出了许多抵御寄生虫的机制。在此,我们提供证据表明,切叶蚁Atta colombica可能通过群体层面的行为反应来对抗Escovopsis,Escovopsis是Atta蚁巢真菌的一种危险寄生虫。在Atta colombica中,蚁巢内的园艺废物会被清理出来并运到垃圾堆——一个外部垃圾场——由一群负责垃圾堆事务的工蚁在那里进行处理。我们发现,感染了Escovopsis的蚁群在垃圾堆(Escovopsis被放置的地方)有更多的工蚁。此外,负责垃圾堆事务的工蚁在将新放置的废物从倾倒地点分散开方面非常有效。因此,Atta超个体的群体层面任务分配策略可能会因对第三方重要成员的疾病威胁而发生变化。