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With the dead under the mat: the zombie ant extended phenotype under a new perspective.

Authors :
Andriolli, Fernando Sarti
Cardoso Neto, José Aragão
de Morais, José Wellington
Baccaro, Fabricio Beggiato
Source :
Science of Nature; Aug2024, Vol. 111 Issue 4, p1-9, 9p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Some parasitic fungi can increase fitness by modifying the behavior of their hosts. These behaviors are known as extended phenotypes because they favor parasitic gene propagation. Here, we studied three lineages of Ophiocordyceps, a fungus that infects ants, altering their conduct before death. According to fungal strategy, ants may die in leaf litter, with entwined legs in branches, under the moss mat, or biting plant tissue. It is critical for parasites that the corpses stay at these places because Ophiocordyceps exhibit iteroparity, possibly releasing spores in multiple life cycles. Thus, we assumed substrate cadaver permanence as a fungi reproductive proxy and corpse height as a proxy of cadaver removal. We hypothesize that biting vegetation and dying in higher places may increase the permanence of ant corpses while avoiding possible corpse predation on the forest floor. We monitored over a year more than 4000 zombie ants in approximately 15 km<superscript>2</superscript> of undisturbed tropical forest in central Amazonia. Our results show a longer permanence of corpses with increasing ground height, suggesting that the parasites may have better chances of releasing spores and infecting new hosts at these places. We found that the zombie ants that last longer on the substrate die under the moss mat in tree trunks, not necessarily biting vegetation. The biting behavior appears to be the most derived and complex mechanism among Ophiocordyceps syndromes. Our results put these findings under a new perspective, proposing that seemingly less complex behavioral changes are ecologically equivalent and adaptative for other parasite lineages. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00281042
Volume :
111
Issue :
4
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Science of Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
178624548
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00114-024-01920-w