Graveyards on the Move: The Spatio-Temporal Distribution of Dead Ophiocordyceps-Infected Ants

Parasites are likely to play an important role in structuring host populations. Many adaptively manipulate host behaviour, so that the extended phenotypes of these parasites and their distributions in space and time are potentially important ecological variables. The fungus Ophiocordyceps unilateral...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2009-03, Vol.4 (3), p.e4835-e4835
Hauptverfasser: Pontoppidan, Maj-Britt, Himaman, Winanda, Hywel-Jones, Nigel L, Boomsma, Jacobus J, Hughes, David P
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Himaman, Winanda
Hywel-Jones, Nigel L
Boomsma, Jacobus J
Hughes, David P
description Parasites are likely to play an important role in structuring host populations. Many adaptively manipulate host behaviour, so that the extended phenotypes of these parasites and their distributions in space and time are potentially important ecological variables. The fungus Ophiocordyceps unilateralis, which is pan-tropical in distribution, causes infected worker ants to leave their nest and die under leaves in the understory of tropical rainforests. Working in a forest dynamic plot in Southern Thailand we mapped the occurrence of these dead ants by examining every leaf in 1,360 m2 of primary rainforest. We established that high density aggregations exist (up to 26 dead ants/m2), which we coined graveyards. We further established that graveyards are patchily distributed in a landscape with no or very few O. unilateralis-killed ants. At some, but not all, spatial scales of analysis the density of dead ants correlated with temperature, humidity and vegetation cover. Remarkably, having found 2243 dead ants inside graveyards we only found 2 live ants of the principal host, ant Camponotus leonardi, suggesting that foraging host ants actively avoid graveyards. We discovered that the principal host ant builds nests in high canopy and its trails only occasionally descend to the forest floor where infection occurs. We advance the hypothesis that rare descents may be a function of limited canopy access to tree crowns and that resource profitability of such trees is potentially traded off against the risk of losing workers due to infection when forest floor trails are the only access routes. Our work underscores the need for an integrative approach that recognises multiple facets of parasitism, such as their extended phenotypes.
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Many adaptively manipulate host behaviour, so that the extended phenotypes of these parasites and their distributions in space and time are potentially important ecological variables. The fungus Ophiocordyceps unilateralis, which is pan-tropical in distribution, causes infected worker ants to leave their nest and die under leaves in the understory of tropical rainforests. Working in a forest dynamic plot in Southern Thailand we mapped the occurrence of these dead ants by examining every leaf in 1,360 m2 of primary rainforest. We established that high density aggregations exist (up to 26 dead ants/m2), which we coined graveyards. We further established that graveyards are patchily distributed in a landscape with no or very few O. unilateralis-killed ants. At some, but not all, spatial scales of analysis the density of dead ants correlated with temperature, humidity and vegetation cover. Remarkably, having found 2243 dead ants inside graveyards we only found 2 live ants of the principal host, ant Camponotus leonardi, suggesting that foraging host ants actively avoid graveyards. We discovered that the principal host ant builds nests in high canopy and its trails only occasionally descend to the forest floor where infection occurs. We advance the hypothesis that rare descents may be a function of limited canopy access to tree crowns and that resource profitability of such trees is potentially traded off against the risk of losing workers due to infection when forest floor trails are the only access routes. Our work underscores the need for an integrative approach that recognises multiple facets of parasitism, such as their extended phenotypes.</abstract><cop>United States</cop><pub>Public Library of Science</pub><pmid>19279680</pmid><doi>10.1371/journal.pone.0004835</doi><tpages>e4835</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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subjects Access routes
animal pathogenic fungi
Animals
Ants
Ants - microbiology
Beauveria bassiana
Biogeography
Camponotus
Camponotus leonardi
Canopies
Cemeteries
Clavicipitaceae
Cordyceps - pathogenicity
dispersal behavior
Ecology
Ecology/Evolutionary Ecology
Ecology/Population Ecology
Ecology/Spatial and Landscape Ecology
Economics
Evolution
Evolutionary biology
Feeding Behavior
Forage
Forages
Forest floor
Forests
Fungal infections
Fungi
Health risks
Humidity
Infections
Leaves
Macroecology
Metarhizium anisopliae
Mortality
mycoses
National parks
Nests
Ophiocordyceps unilateralis
Parasites
Parasitism
Plant Leaves - microbiology
population density
Profitability
Rain forests
Rainforests
Rhodnius prolixus
Schistocerca
Science
Spatial analysis
Spatial distribution
Temporal distribution
temporal variation
Trees
Tropical Climate
Tropical forests
Understory
Vegetation cover
Wildlife conservation
worker insects
Workers (insect caste)
title Graveyards on the Move: The Spatio-Temporal Distribution of Dead Ophiocordyceps-Infected Ants
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