Consequences of the arms race between Maculinea teleius social parasite and Myrmica host ants for myrmecophilous butterfly conservation
The arms race between Maculinea butterflies and Myrmica host ants leads to local host-parasite adaptations. In our study, we assessed whether sympatric and allopatric Myrmica scabrinodis populations exhibit behavioural differences towards Maculinea teleius larvae during the adoption-period when butt...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of insect conservation 2016-10, Vol.20 (5), p.887-893 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The arms race between
Maculinea
butterflies and
Myrmica
host ants leads to local host-parasite adaptations. In our study, we assessed whether sympatric and allopatric
Myrmica scabrinodis
populations exhibit behavioural differences towards
Maculinea teleius
larvae during the adoption-period when butterfly larvae need to be taken inside the
Myrmica
nest. The second aim was to assess the butterfly survival rate inside ant colonies from different populations. We used one sympatric host population and three allopatric populations: one infested by
M. teleius
and two uninfested populations. We found that ants from the sympatric population showed a higher number of positive behaviours toward
M. teleius
larvae during adoption than ants from the allopatric populations. There were no differences in the number of inspection or negative behaviour events. The survival of butterfly larvae was highest inside sympatric host colonies and differed from the survival of
M. teleius
reared by ants from the allopatric, uninfested populations. No difference was found for the survival rate of
M. teleius
raised by infested, allopatric host colonies compared to sympatric host populations. Our results suggest the lack of behavioural counter-adaptations of local hosts of
M. teleius
that more easily adopt and rear butterfly caterpillars compared to naive
M. scabrinodis
colonies. Our results may also have implications for
Maculinea
butterfly conservation, especially for reintroduction programmes. We suggest that the existence of behavioural host defences should be checked for the source host population, as well as for the
Myrmica
population from the reintroduction site. It may also be reasonable to introduce several
Myrmica
host colonies from the source butterfly host population. |
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ISSN: | 1366-638X 1572-9753 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s10841-016-9925-3 |