Ascomycete fungi in the nests of ants inhabiting plants (= myrmecophytes) are very often cultivated by the ants in small patches and used as food source. Where these fungi come from is not known yet. Two scenarios of fungus recruitment are possible: (1) random infection through spores or hyphal fragments from the environment, or (2) transmission from mother to daughter colonies by the foundress queen. It is also not known at which stage of the colony life cycle fungiculture is initiated, and whether the- symbiont fungi serve as food for the ant queen. To clarify these questions, we investigated four Azteca ant species inhabiting three different Cecropia species (C. insignis, C. obtusifolia, and C. peltata). We analysed an rRNA gene fragment from 52 fungal patches produced by founding queens and compared them with those from established Azteca colonies (n = 54). The infrabuccal pockets of winged queens were dissected to investigate whether young queens carry fungi from their mother colony. Additionally, 15N labelling experiments were done to verify whether the queen feeds on the patches until she is nourished by her first worker offspring. We infer from the results that the fungi cultivated in hollow plant structures are transferred from the parental colony of the young queen. First, fungal genotypes/OTU diversity was not significantly different between foundress queen patches and established colonies, and second, hyphal parts were discovered in the infrabuccal pockets of female alates. We could show that fungiculture already starts before queens lay their eggs, and that the queens do not feed on fungal patch material but feed it to the larvae. Our findings suggest that fungiculture may be crucial for successful colony founding of arboreal ants in the tropics.
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http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0192207 | PLOS |
Vet Med Sci
January 2024
Department of Criminal Justice and Security, Pace University, New York, USA.
Background: Oriental hornets are large predatory hymenoptera that occur in the southern part of Asia and the southeastern Mediterranean. Among many pests of bee colonies, Vespa orientalis was recorded to be one of the most destructive.
Objectives: The aim of this study was to: (1) monitor the presence of pathogens carried by V.
Sci Rep
July 2022
XCS Consulting Pty Ltd, Yarralumla, ACT, 2600, Australia.
Social insects are highly diverse in their social structures, aside from the consistent presence of reproductive castes. Among social insects, the Australian paper wasp Ropalidia plebeiana constructs extremely dense colony aggregations consisting of hundreds of colonies within a few square meters; however, little is known about the aggregation structures. We genetically analyzed the colony and population structure of R.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArthropod Struct Dev
July 2022
Graduate School of Agriculture, Tamagawa University, Machida, Tokyo, 194-8610, Japan; College of Agriculture, Tamagawa University, Machida, Tokyo, 194-8610, Japan; Honeybee Science Research Center, Tamagawa University, Machida, Tokyo, 194-8610, Japan. Electronic address:
In a majority of ants, a newly mated queen independently founds a colony and claustrally raises her first brood without foraging outside the nest. During claustral independent colony foundation (ICF) in several ants, the esophagus of the founding queen expands and develops into a "thoracic crop," which is then filled with a liquid substrate for larval feeding. It has been suggested that these substrates are converted from the founding queen's body reserves (e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAbstractThe evolution of effectively sterile workers in the aculeate Hymenoptera (ants, bees, and stinging wasps) requires that a female's life span largely overlap that of her daughters. The evolution of long nest foundress life spans in eusocial species from the short life spans of solitary species is investigated. Analyses that control for phylogeny show for the first time that foundress adult life span increases and first-brood offspring development time decreases with increasing colony size, resulting in the ratio of foundress adult life span to worker total life span increasing with increasing colony size.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFColonial organisms host a large diversity of symbionts (collectively, parasites, mutualists, and commensals) that use vertical transmission (from parent colony to offspring colony) and/or horizontal transmission to disperse between host colonies. The early life of some colonies, characterized by the dispersal and establishment of solitary individuals, may constrain vertical transmission and favor horizontal transmission between large established colonies. We explore this possibility with the miniature cockroach , a symbiont of leaf-cutter ants and the mutualist fungal gardens they cultivate.
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