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Pathogen avoidance and prey discrimination in ants.


ABSTRACT: Insect societies have developed sanitary strategies, one of which is the avoidance of infectious food resources as a primary line of defence. Using binary choices, we investigated whether Myrmica rubra ants can identify prey that has been artificially infected with the entomopathogenic fungus, Metarhizium brunneum. We compared the ants' foraging behaviour towards infected prey at three different stages of fungus development: (i) prey covered with fungal conidia, (ii) prey freshly killed by the fungus and (iii) sporulating prey. Most foragers retrieved a corpse covered with a high number of spores but they consistently avoided a sporulating prey and collected less prey that had recently died from fungal infection. Furthermore, ant responses were highly variable, with some individuals retrieving the first prey they encountered while others inspected both available prey before making a decision. Workers were not repelled by the simple presence of fungal conidia but nevertheless, they avoided retrieving cadavers at later stages of fungal infection. We discuss how these different avoidance responses could be related to: differences in the ants' perceptive abilities; physico-chemical cues characterizing fungus-infected prey or in the existence of physiological or behavioural defences that limit sanitary risks associated with potentially contaminated resources.

SUBMITTER: Pereira H 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC7062100 | biostudies-literature | 2020 Feb

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Pathogen avoidance and prey discrimination in ants.

Pereira Hugo H   Detrain Claire C  

Royal Society open science 20200219 2


Insect societies have developed sanitary strategies, one of which is the avoidance of infectious food resources as a primary line of defence. Using binary choices, we investigated whether <i>Myrmica rubra</i> ants can identify prey that has been artificially infected with the entomopathogenic fungus, <i>Metarhizium brunneum</i>. We compared the ants' foraging behaviour towards infected prey at three different stages of fungus development<i>:</i> (i) prey covered with fungal conidia, (ii) prey fr  ...[more]

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