Slave-making ants are specialized social parasites that steal the young from colonies of their host species to augment their slave supply. The degree of parasite-host specialization has been shown to shape the trajectory along which parasites and hosts coevolve and is a prime contributor to the geographic mosaic of coevolution. However, virtually nothing is known about extrinsic influences on parasite-host dynamics, although the simple addition of a competing slave-maker may significantly alter selection pressures. Here we report the effect of two sympatric slave-makers on a single host. We measured temporal and spatial changes in colonies of the primary host Temnothorax curvispinosus that had been placed in field enclosures along with a single colony of either one or both species of the North American slave-making ants Protomognathus americanus and Temnothorax duloticus. Each slave-maker species alone had a negative impact on its hosts, although one slave-maker species more frequently decimated its host assemblage and then went extinct. Nevertheless, the combined effect in mixed-parasite enclosures was, surprisingly, greatly attenuated. Virulent slave-maker growth and prudent slave-maker decay in these shared enclosures, together with field data showing an inverse proportional relationship between the two slave-makers in natural populations, suggest that their checkered distribution is a consequence of direct asymmetrical antagonism between parasites. Thus, our results imply a tripartite coevolutionary arms race, whereby intraguild interactions among social parasites strongly affect the realized selection pressures on hosts and contribute to the geographic mosaic of coevolution.
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Ecol Lett
January 2025
Department of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany, University of Zürich, Zurich, Switzerland.
The geographic mosaic of coevolution predicts reciprocal selection, the first step in coevolution, to vary with changing biotic and abiotic environmental conditions. Studying how temperature affects reciprocal selection is essential to connect effects of global warming on the microevolutionary patterns of coevolution to the ecological processes underlying them. In this study, we investigated whether temperature influenced reciprocal selection between a plant (Brassica rapa) and its pollinating butterfly herbivore (Pieris rapae).
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Department of Ophthalmology, University Hospital Bonn, Venusberg-Campus 1, 53127 Bonn, Germany.
: Lesions characterized as complete retinal pigment epithelium and outer retinal atrophy (cRORA) are linked to the progression of intermediate age-related macular degeneration (iAMD). However, the extent of functional impairment of such precursor lesions remains uncertain. : In this cross-sectional study, 4 participants (mean age ± standard deviation: 71.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe complex of taxa closely related to Aricia anteros includes the species A. anteros sensu stricto, A. crassipuncta, A.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFData Brief
December 2024
Geography Department, School of Environment, Geography and Applied Economics, Harokopio University of Athens, Kallithea, Athens, Attica, Greece.
The geospatial dataset presented in this manuscript, represents elements of the historical, natural, political and cultural environment of Cyprus, as it was recorded by British officials during the early years (1878-1883) of their administration on the island. The data were derived from Horatio Herbert Kitchener's map of Cyprus, published in 1885 in 15 sheets, at a scale of 1:63 360 (1 inch to 1 mile), which is considered a milestone in the cartography of the island. The geospatial layers were extracted my manual on-screen digitization of the geographic features depicted on the georeferenced seamless mosaic created by the individual sheets (Chalkias et al.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFParasit Vectors
November 2024
Division of Life Sciences, Korea Polar Research Institute, Incheon, Republic of Korea.
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