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Title: Do these eggs smell funny to you?: an experimental study of egg discrimination by hosts of the social parasite Polyergus breviceps (Hymenoptera: Formicidae)
Authors: Johnson, C.A.
Topoff, H.
Vander Meer, R.K.
Lavine, B.
USDA, ARS
Source: Behavioral ecology and sociobiology. 2005 Jan., v. 57, no. 3, p. 245-255.
NALT Subjects: Formicidae
Formica
social parasitism
insect behavior
insect colonies
host-parasite relationships
ova
hydrocarbons
chemical ecology
worker insects
coevolution
Other Subjects: local adaptation
colony founding
slave-making behavior
Formica occulta
Formica gnava
Polyergus breviceps
Issue Date: Jan-2005
Abstract: Social parasites exploit the behaviours of other social species. Infiltration of host systems involves a variety of mechanisms depending on the conditions within the host society and the needs of the social parasite. For many species of socially parasitic ants, colony establishment entails the usurpation of colonies of other species. This frequently involves the eviction or death of the host colony queen and the subsequent adoption of the invading queen. The social parasite queen achieves host worker acceptance by either manipulating the nest-mate recognition processes of the host or undergoing chemical modification. Little is known, however, about how host workers respond to social parasite eggs or whether host species defend against brood parasitism during parasite invasions. Host species are believed to adopt social parasite offspring because the recent common ancestry between many social parasites and their hosts may grant the sharing of certain characteristics such as chemical cues. Use of multiple host species, however, suggests other processes are needed for the social bond between host and parasite young to form. This study reports the findings of adoption bioassays in which eggs from a slave-maker ant, Polyergus breviceps, were offered to workers of two of its host species from unparasitised or newly parasitised nests to determine whether P. breviceps eggs generally elicit rearing behaviours from multiple host species. Comparisons of parasite egg survival until adulthood with conspecific egg survival reveal that workers of both host species, free-living or newly enslaved, do not typically accept slave-maker eggs. Both host species thus have sufficient discriminatory power to reject social parasite eggs although our hydrocarbon analysis indicates parasite eggs may be adapted to their local host species. Combined these results suggest that host rearing of P. breviceps eggs may reflect an evolutionary equilibrium that is maintained by probability and cost of recognition errors.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10113/3334
Appears in Collections:USDA Research and Information

Files in This Item:

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IND43949608.pdf291KbAdobe PDFView/Open

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