Reber Anabelle, Castella Grégoire, Christe Philippe, Chapuisat Michel
Department of Ecology and Evolution, Biophore, UNIL-Sorge, University of Lausanne, 1015 Lausanne, Switzerland.
Ecol Lett. 2008 Jul;11(7):682-9. doi: 10.1111/j.1461-0248.2008.01177.x. Epub 2008 Mar 26.
A leading hypothesis linking parasites to social evolution is that more genetically diverse social groups better resist parasites. Moreover, group diversity can encompass factors other than genetic variation that may also influence disease resistance. Here, we tested whether group diversity improved disease resistance in an ant species with natural variation in colony queen number. We formed experimental groups of workers and challenged them with the fungal parasite Metarhizium anisopliae. Workers originating from monogynous colonies (headed by a single queen and with low genetic diversity) had higher survival than workers originating from polygynous ones, both in uninfected groups and in groups challenged with M. anisopliae. However, an experimental increase of group diversity by mixing workers originating from monogynous colonies strongly increased the survival of workers challenged with M. anisopliae, whereas it tended to decrease their survival in absence of infection. This experiment suggests that group diversity, be it genetic or environmental, improves the mean resistance of group members to the fungal infection, probably through the sharing of physiological or behavioural defences.
一种将寄生虫与社会进化联系起来的主流假说认为,基因多样性更高的社会群体能更好地抵御寄生虫。此外,群体多样性还可能包含除基因变异之外的其他因素,这些因素也可能影响抗病能力。在此,我们以蚁群中蚁后数量存在自然差异的一种蚂蚁为研究对象,测试了群体多样性是否能提高其抗病能力。我们组建了工蚁实验组,并用真菌寄生虫绿僵菌对它们进行攻击。无论是在未感染组还是受到绿僵菌攻击的组中,来自单蚁后蚁群(由一只蚁后领导,基因多样性较低)的工蚁存活率都高于来自多蚁后蚁群的工蚁。然而,通过混合来自单蚁后蚁群的工蚁来人为增加群体多样性,极大地提高了受到绿僵菌攻击的工蚁的存活率,而在未感染的情况下,这样做却往往会降低它们的存活率。该实验表明,无论是基因层面还是环境层面的群体多样性,可能都通过生理或行为防御机制的共享,提高了群体成员对真菌感染的平均抵抗力。