Hindawi Publishing Corporation
Psyche
Volume 2012, Article ID 342157, 5 pages
doi:10.1155/2012/342157
Editorial
Ants and Their Parasites
Jean-Paul Lachaud,1, 2 Alain Lenoir,3 and Volker Witte4
1 Centre
de Recherches sur la Cognition Animale, CNRS-UMR 5169, Université de Toulouse, UPS, 118 route de Narbonne,
31062 Toulouse Cedex 09, France
2 Departamento de Entomologı́a Tropical, El Colegio de la Frontera Sur, Avenida Centenario Km. 5.5, AP 424,
77014 Chetumal, QRoo, Mexico
3 IRBI, UMR CNRS 7261, Faculté des Sciences, Université François Rabelais, Parc de Grandmont, 37200 Tours, France
4 Department Biologie II, Ludwig-Maximilians Universität München, Großhaderner Straße 2, 82152 Planegg-Martinsried, Germany
Correspondence should be addressed to Jean-Paul Lachaud,
[email protected]
Received 23 February 2012; Accepted 23 February 2012
Copyright © 2012 Jean-Paul Lachaud et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution
License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly
cited.
Ants accumulate and protect collective resources and, with
the exception of nomadic species, live in a nest which
is considered to be one of the bases of the evolution of
eusociality. Resources and/or protective services provided
by ant colonies are exploited in manifold ways by an
amazing diversity of other organisms acting as guests and/or
parasites: viruses, bacteria, fungi, sporozoa, amoeba, ciliates,
nematodes, trematodes, cestodes, mollusks, diplopods, crustaceans, mites, spiders, and a large variety of parasitic or parasitoid insects. Such associations can be obligatory or facultative, permanent or temporary, harmful or beneficial for the
host. Due to the diversity of interactions, an understanding
of the nature of these relationships and the mechanisms of
integration used by parasites as well as the defense strategies
developed by their potential host remains a challenge.
Parasites certainly increase specific selection pressures on
colony phenotype, and they may also shape the composition
and dynamics of ant communities. Over the past two decades
there has been a growing interest in the impact of parasites
on colony phenotype, and their role in the ecology and
evolution of their hosts. Despite the apparent importance
of ant parasites, detailed knowledge is lacking, for example,
about their diversity and abundance or selection pressures
imposed through parasitism on host reproductive strategies.
Parasitism in ants has attracted the attention of numerous scientists in the last two centuries (see the numerous
publications on this topic by authors like E. W. Janson, A.
Forel, C. Janet, E. Wasmann, H. Viehmeyer, J.-J. Kieffer,
K. Escherich, W. M. Wheeler, H. St. J. K. Donisthorpe, W.
M. Mann, C. Rettenmeyer, E. O. Wilson, B. Hölldobler,
D. Kistner, U. Maschwitz, and P. Schmid-Hempel among
others). Since the synthesis of Kistner in 1982 [1] and of
Schmid-Hempel in 1998 [2], only one complete review has
been published [3] (but see also [4] for social parasites) and,
in spite of the accumulation of much information in the last
decades, this meaningful topic has not been brought together
in a specific issue for a long time. This special issue, of course,
cannot cover all possible ant parasites, but it examines a
wide range of species: viruses, bacteria, fungi, nematodes,
silverfishes, flies, butterflies, beetles, spiders, wasps, and
ants themselves. It is divided into two main sections: (1)
behavioral and ecological aspects of parasitism, in which
existing associations are reviewed and discussed, some new
associations are described, and some concepts are reanalyzed
in a more up-to-date integrative vision; (2) infection, impact
on ants and biological control, in which particular effort
has been made to provide both an analytical review of the
experimental material actually available and a proposal of
guidelines for future research on the topic.
Behavioral and Ecological Aspects of Parasitism. Numerous
species take advantage of the supplies of other organisms
and cleptobiosis, a quite common phenomenon among
animals, also occurs at ants’ expenses. M. D. Breed et al.
review concepts linked to food stealing in social insects,
distinguishing cleptobiosis from some related phenomena,
and place this knowledge in ecological and evolutionary
contexts. In most cases, success in parasitizing ants depends
largely on the degree of resemblance to the host, which varies
considerably among the diverse mimetic parasites found in
2
ant societies. Different morphological, behavioral, and/or
chemical adaptations allow cleptoparasites to deceive ant
defense mechanisms. Reviewing more especially the use of
the terms that describe the chemical resemblance between
the cuticular chemical profiles of parasites and that of
their hosts, C. von Beeren et al. give an overview of cases
concerning adaptive chemical resemblance and propose a
terminology more consistent with that generally used in
biology: “chemical crypsis” when the operator (the host)
does not detect the mimic as a discrete entity and “chemical
masquerade” when the operator detects the mimic but
misidentifies it as an uninteresting entity.
The reports of adaptive resemblance (visual, morphological, and/or chemical) are amazingly numerous. Spider-ant
associations, for example, involving either myrmecomorphy,
myrmecophily or myrmecophagy, or a combination of the
three, are very common, and P. E. Cushing provides an excellent update of her important 1997 review [5] with a welcome
summary of recent work testing the adaptational significance
of these associations. Among spiders, myrmecomorphy is
supposed to usually involve Batesian mimicry but such an
assumption has not been demonstrated experimentally. X. J.
Nelson provides the first evidence that salticid ant mimicry is
truly Batesian mimicry. She shows experimentally both that
ant mimicry is perceived by the predator and has a protective
effect for the mimic, and how a predatory spider is affected
by the degree of visual resemblance of ant mimics to ants.
Among the myrmecophiles, the Coleoptera are probably
the most diverse group. In some cases, associations have
been known for a long time but the behavioral adaptations
allowing the integration of the parasite remain poorly
studied. Through a quantitative analysis, E. Maurizi et
al. show that the rewarding behavior, during which the
ground beetle Paussus favieri provides attractive chemical
substances to its host Pheidole pallidula, is one of the key
factors for acceptance and full integration in the ant society.
Another way of deceiving a host is through innate chemical
mimicry (sensu C. von Beeren et al.), involving a change
in the parasite’s chemical profile in accordance with the
host nest odor. This is what A. Lenoir et al. report for a
histerid and a staphylinid beetle, both of which parasitize
Aphaenogaster senilis, whereas a silverfish that shares the
same host shows only low quantities of host hydrocarbons,
which are probably acquired passively. After isolation, the
histerid beetles Sternocoelis hispanus keep their hydrocarbon
quantity, showing that they are able to synthesize them and
adjust their profile to the host colony via direct contacts. This
is the first such demonstration in a myrmecophile beetle. In
all the other cases studied, the hydrocarbons are provided by
the host as occurs, for example, in Malayatelura ponerophila,
a kleptoparasitic silverfish of Leptogenys distinguenda [6].
Various species, like many coccinellids, indirectly affect
ants through their predation on trophobiotic Hemiptera.
Possibly, frequent interactions with ants led some species
to become myrmecophilous and to use chemical mimicry
to get close to their prey. A. Vantaux et al. provide an
overview of the evolution of myrmecophilous traits in
ladybirds and discuss from an evolutionary perspective both
costs and benefits of myrmecophily and even dietary shifts
Psyche
to myrmecophagy, which occurred in a few species. By
comparison, the myrmecophagy on leaf-cutter ant queens by
dung beetles of the genus Canthon is a much better known
phenomenon, even if behavioral studies are scarce. L. C. Forti
et al. present in their thorough behavioral study many details
on how Canthon virens attacks Atta queens.
Besides hemipterans, numerous butterflies species are
associated mutualistically with ants, and species from the
family Lycaenidae are among the best studied. Interestingly,
associations also changed towards parasitic interactions
several times. K. Fiedler presents a comprehensive review
of the host ants of parasitic lycaenids and analyzes the
macroecological patterns that could be related with the use of
particular ant genera as hosts. His large-scale survey reveals
that those ant genera in which associations with lycaenids
are particularly numerous are also more likely to serve as
hosts for parasitic species. Among lycaenids, associations
between the genus Maculinea and the ant genus Myrmica are
certainly the most investigated. F. Barbero et al. present an
overview of the adaptations used by Maculinea butterflies to
infiltrate and live as parasites in Myrmica ant colonies, and
more particularly, based on a synthesis of recent research,
how they mimic the acoustic communication of their hosts.
Some other parasitic butterflies are less well known, and L.
A. Kaminski and F. S. Carvalho-Filho describe and illustrate
for the first time the immature stages of Aricoris propitia
and uncover the diversity of life cycles in the still enigmatic
butterfly family Riodinidae.
A large number of parasitoid species have been reported
in association with ants but, most often, the true nature of
their relationships is poorly known and few species are really
highly specialized on ants in general. High specialization on
ants is however the case in various genera of phorid flies
and in numerous species of wasps from three superfamilies: Chalcidoidea, Ichneumonoidea, and Diaprioidea. B. V.
Brown and S. M. Philpott describe three new species of
Pseudacteon flies with some details on the natural history
of the ant-fly interaction and provide a useful taxonomic
key to the species. Successful parasitism by phorids involves
utilization of multimodal cues to locate and recognize
the host. K. A. Mathis and S. M. Philpott review some
important components of phorid biology, and the variety
of strategies and cues used by the three most common
phorid genera attacking ants (Apocephalus, Pseudacteon, and
Neodohrniphora). Apart from their direct parasitic effects
on ants, phorid flies also affect their behavior, and H.Y. Hsieh and I. Perfecto review the impact of parasitoid
phorids on ants and other organisms that interact with ants.
They focus both on the variety of mechanisms used by ants
to cope with phorid parasitism and on the complexity of
these interactions through trait-mediated indirect effects on
other trophic levels. Finally, in an attempt to understand
how parasitoids affect their host ants’ foraging success in a
community framework involving species of different body
size and behavioral dominance, E. B. Wilkinson and D. H.
Feener Jr. examine how habitat structural complexity affects
the foraging behavior of two species of the genus Pheidole
by interacting with parasitoids of the genus Apocephalus.
Hymenopterous parasitoids of ants also exhibit a wide
Psyche
array of adaptations to attack such potentially dangerous
hosts. Reports of parasitoid wasps associated with ants are
numerous but real primary parasitoidism has rarely been
proven. J.-P. Lachaud and G. Pérez-Lachaud review all of
the cases for which such primary parasitoidism has reliably
been established, providing an updated list of at least 138
species from 9 families. They report some new associations
and focus both on the diversity of these parasitoid wasps
and the diversity of the types of interactions they have
formed with their ant hosts. Among these hymenopteran
parasitoids of ants, the eucharitid family has been particularly under scrutiny for the last three decades, especially
the genus Kapala, the most common in the Neotropics [7].
A. A. Vásquez-Ordóñez et al. present useful natural history
information on the interactions between a Kapala species
and the host ant Ectatomma ruidum in Colombia. Evaluating
the effect of habitat type on eucharitid parasitism, they report
a significantly higher prevalence of parasitism in host ant
colonies in woodland compared to grassland habitat.
Infection, Impact on Ants and Biological Control. In numerous applied studies on ant parasitism, specific attention has
been given to the ways in which parasite pressure may affect
patterns of life history in ant hosts. For example, generalist
entomopathogenic fungi could be used in biological control
of pest ants as discussed by M. M. R. Ribeiro et al. in the case
of Beauveria bassiana and Aspergillus ochraceus against the
grass-cutting ant Atta bisphaerica, one of the most important
pests of pastures and crops in Brazil. It is the first time that
A. ochraceus is reported to infect Atta with a high prevalence.
However, field experiments are necessary to test for their
effect as biological control. Pathogens are difficult to identify
because sick or dying ants are promptly removed from the
nest or leave the nest themselves (see the recent review
by Shorter and Rueppell [8]). Some entomopathogenic
fungi are ant specific and X. Espadaler and S. Santamaria
review what is known concerning the taxonomy, natural
history, and/or ecology of ecto- and endoparasitic fungi
specialized on ants throughout the Holarctic region. The
fungi considered in this paper show a gradient of negative
effects on the host, and their specificity does not seem to
be always very strict since various fungi are known from a
range of hosts (e.g., Laboulbienna; formicarum is hosted by
24 ant species belonging to 3 formicine tribes). Specificity is
apparently higher both in the mutualistic basidiomycetous
fungi cultivated for food by neotropical fungus-growing ants
of the tribe Attini, and the specialized microfungal parasites
which coevolved with these associations and have a negative
impact on the fungus gardens. Recent research on this
issue has provided novel insights into coevolution, antibiotic
defense mechanisms, and behavioral interactions within
symbiotic systems. F. C. Pagnocca et al. pulled together
diverse literature and present a review of the microfungi
associated with leaf-cutting ant gardens, while S. H. Yek et
al. synthesize our current understanding on the evolution of
specialized parasites of the attine fungus gardening system.
Using a modified version of Tinbergen’s four categories of
evolutionary questions to structure their review, they focus
on development, mechanism, adaptation, and evolutionary
3
history and suggest further directions for investigations of
this symbiosis.
Various other organisms, in addition to entomopathogenic fungi, can affect the biology of their hosts.
Bacteria of the genus Wolbachia, for example, are known to
alter the reproductive capabilities of their hosts significantly,
showing complex interactions with them, which, in some
cases, have evolved to symbiotic associations. K. K. Ingram
et al. examine possible parameters affecting the spread of
Wolbachia infections in a newly established population
of Formica fusca. Their results show that horizontal
transmission of Wolbachia is apparently uncommon and that
there are no marked fitness differences between infected and
noninfected colonies. This is an additional illustration of the
complex role of Wolbachia in ants which is not yet explained
(see [9, 10]). Ants can also serve as hosts of a variety of internal or external parasitic nematodes from several families with
more or less complex life cycles. Different entomopathogenic
nematodes like Steinernema and Heterorhabditis have been
suggested to control ants through inundative applications.
The current state of knowledge regarding the occurrence,
systematics, life history, and pathology of all described
nematodes associated with formicids is summarized by G.
Poinar Jr. through a richly illustrated review. Apart from
including a simple key to the higher taxa of ant-infecting
nematodes, he identifies the large gaps that exist in our
understanding of this very interesting system.
The use of ant parasites as a means of biological control
has been most heavily investigated in relation to one of the
most important pests in the New World, the imported fire
ants (Solenopsis). Focusing their review on research programs
that have been carried out over 25 years in their laboratory,
J. Briano et al. give a wide panorama of the natural enemies
of fire ants (microsporidia, nematodes, viruses, phorid flies,
eucharitid wasps, myrmecolacid strepsipteran, and social
parasitic ants). They summarize published information and
include many complementary unpublished observations.
Among these natural parasites, a more special focus is given
by S. M. Valles about the research on viruses through a
compilation of the literature on fire ant viruses, and a review
on the properties of three particular viruses infecting S.
invicta. It is worth noting that viruses were unknown in any
ant species before the first discover by Valles and colleagues in
2004 [11], and this topic will certainly be a central issue in fire
ants control programs in the future. Finally, the evaluation of
the use of Pseudacteon parasitoid flies as potential biological
control agents of invasive Solenopsis fire ants is critically and
exhaustively reviewed by L. W. Morrison. The sound conclusions of this review about the realities of biological control of
fire ants by phorid flies contrast with most of the literature
on that topic and emphasize the necessity of a battery of
complementary natural enemies, in addition to the release
of phorid flies, for potentially successful regulatory effects on
fire ant populations. This points to a need for investing more
effort into studies on other potential control agents.
More and more studies show a fascinating coevolution
between parasites and their hosts. An accurate survey of
this topic will provide useful information to refine our
understanding of both the mechanisms involved and their
4
Psyche
phylogenitical and evolutionary components. With the
growing interest in biodiversity, we realize that we are
far from concluding our assessment of existing forms of
parasitism. Considering the increasing losses in biodiversity
due to habitats restructuration and climatological changes,
the urgent need for making such inventories is obvious. The
world of the microorganisms is one of the most promising.
For example, G. Poinar Jr. indicates that some 20,000
nematodes have been described, while their species diversity
has been estimated to be as high as 10 million, and even
if the proportion of known species associated with ants is
low, their real number is surely much more impressive than
actually suggested. A metagenomics approach will be useful
in the future; it has already begun in honeybees [12] and in
termites [13] and is just starting up in ants [14]. Parasites
contribute to maintaining complex ecosystems and have a
role in stabilizing mutualisms as observed in fungus-growing
ants [15]. Their role as a “top-down” process, structuring
ant communities and populations, is also considered to
be important. Some authors, like Feener [16], suggest
that the assembly of ant communities is mediated by
parasitoids. Others [2, 17, 18] suspect that parasites and
parasitoids may be involved in the emergence of alternative
reproductive strategies such as polygyny and/or multiple
mating (polyandry), by inducing an enhancement in the
genetic diversity of the workers that would increase resistance
to parasites and pathogens (but see [19]). Recent data on
the evolution of elaborate mushroom bodies in the brains of
hymenopteran insects even suggest that the neurobehavioral
modifications linked to the capacity for associative and
spatial learning during host-finding behavior in parasitoids
may have served as preadaptations for central place foraging
in social hymenopterans [20]. Ants (and, more generally,
social insects) and their parasites are an exceptional model.
In the next years, more studies examining their complex
interactions from every possible angle, attempting to
bring a more global vision of the functioning of such an
evolutionary important relationship, will surely constitute a
challenging and fascinating goal for us and many colleagues.
Acknowledgments
The guest editors would like to thank all of the authors
who accepted to participate in the challenge of giving rise to
this special issue. Particular thanks are due to the numerous
referees who generously helped us to make this special issue
possible. We are also grateful to Tomer Czaczkes both for his
helpful advices and useful suggestions on an earlier draft of
this paper and for English improvement.
Jean-Paul Lachaud
Alain Lenoir
Volker Witte
References
[1] D. H. Kistner, “The social insects’ bestiary,” in Social Insects,
H. R. Hermann, Ed., vol. 3, pp. 1–244, Academic Press, New
York, NY, USA, 1982.
[2] P. Schmid-Hempel, Parasites in Social Insects, Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ, USA, 1998.
[3] J. J. Boomsma, P. Schmid-Hempel, and W. O. H. Hugues,
“Life histories and parasite pressure across the major groups
of social insects,” in Insect Evolutionary Ecology, M. D. E.
Fellowes, G. J. Holloway, and J. Rolff, Eds., pp. 139–175, CAB
International, Wallingford, UK, 2005.
[4] D. R. Nash and J. J. Boomsma, “Communication between
hosts and social parasites,” in Sociobiology of Communication:
an Interdisciplinary Perspective, P. D’Ettorre and D. P. Hugues,
Eds., pp. 55–79, Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK, 2008.
[5] P. E. Cushing, “Myrmecomorphy and myrmecophily in spiders: a review,” Florida Entomologist, vol. 80, no. 2, pp. 165–
193, 1997.
[6] C. von Beeren, S. Schulz, R. Hashim, and V. Witte, “Acquisition
of chemical recognition cues facilitates integration into ant
societies,” BMC Ecology, vol. 11, article 30, 2011.
[7] J.-P. Lachaud, P. Cerdan, and G. Pérez-Lachaud, “Poneromorph ants associated with parasitoid wasps of the genus
Kapala Cameron (Hymenoptera: Eucharitidae) in French
Guiana,” Psyche, vol. 2012, Article ID 393486, 6 pages, 2012.
[8] J. R. Shorter and O. Rueppell, “A review on self-destructive
defense behaviors in social insects,” Insectes Sociaux, vol. 59,
no. 1, pp. 1–10, 2012.
[9] J. A. Russell, “The ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) are unique
and enigmatic hosts of prevalent Wolbachia (Alphaproteobacteria) symbionts,” Myrmecological News, vol. 16, pp. 7–23,
2012.
[10] C. Martins, R. F. Souza, and O. C. Bueno, “Presence and distribution of the endosymbiont Wolbachia among Solenopsis spp.
(Hymenoptera: Formicidae) from Brazil and its evolutionary
history,” Journal of Invertebrate Pathology, vol. 109, no. 3, pp.
287–296, 2012.
[11] S. M. Valles, C. A. Strong, P. M. Dang et al., “A picorna-like
virus from the red imported fire ant, Solenopsis invicta: initial
discovery, genome sequence, and characterization,” Virology,
vol. 328, no. 1, pp. 151–157, 2004.
[12] D. L. Cox-Foster, S. Conlan, E. C. Holmes et al., “A metagenomic survey of microbes in honey bee colony collapse
disorder,” Science, vol. 318, no. 5848, pp. 283–287, 2007.
[13] F. Warnecke, P. Luginbühl, N. Ivanova et al., “Metagenomic
and functional analysis of hindgut microbiota of a woodfeeding higher termite,” Nature, vol. 450, no. 7169, pp. 560–
565, 2007.
[14] H. D. Ishak, R. Plowes, R. Sen et al., “Bacterial diversity
in Solenopsis invicta and Solenopsis geminata ant colonies
characterized by 16S amplicon 454 pyrosequencing,” Microbial
Ecology, vol. 61, no. 4, pp. 821–831, 2011.
[15] A. E. F. Little and C. R. Currie, “Parasites may help stabilize
cooperative relationships,” BMC Evolutionary Biology, vol. 9,
article 124, 2009.
[16] D. H. Feener Jr., “Is the assembly of ant communities mediated
by parasitoids?” Oikos, vol. 90, no. 1, pp. 79–88, 2000.
[17] M. G. Gardner, K. Schönrogge, G. W. Elmes, and J. A. Thomas,
“Increased genetic diversity as a defence against parasites is
undermined by social parasites: Microdon mutabilis hoverflies
infesting Formica lemani ant colonies,” Proceedings of the Royal
Society B, vol. 274, no. 1606, pp. 103–110, 2007.
[18] W. O. H. Hughes, F. L. W. Ratnieks, and B. P. Oldroyd,
“Multiple paternity or multiple queens: two routes to greater
intracolonial genetic diversity in the eusocial hymenoptera,”
Journal of Evolutionary Biology, vol. 21, no. 4, pp. 1090–1095,
2008.
Psyche
[19] G. Pérez-Lachaud, J. E. Valenzuela, and J.-P. Lachaud, “Is
increased resistance to parasitism at the origin of polygyny
in a Mexican population of the ant Ectatomma tuberculatum
(Hymenoptera: Formicidae)?” The Florida Entomologist, vol.
94, no. 3, pp. 677–684, 2011.
[20] S. M. Farris and S. Schulmeister, “Parasitoidism, not sociality,
is associated with the evolution of elaborate mushroom bodies
in the brains of hymenopteran insects,” Proceedings of the Royal
Society B, vol. 278, no. 1707, pp. 940–951, 2011.
5
International Journal of
Peptides
BioMed
Research International
Hindawi Publishing Corporation
http://www.hindawi.com
Volume 2014
Advances in
Stem Cells
International
Hindawi Publishing Corporation
http://www.hindawi.com
Volume 2014
Hindawi Publishing Corporation
http://www.hindawi.com
Volume 2014
Virolog y
Hindawi Publishing Corporation
http://www.hindawi.com
International Journal of
Genomics
Volume 2014
Hindawi Publishing Corporation
http://www.hindawi.com
Volume 2014
Journal of
Nucleic Acids
Zoology
International Journal of
Hindawi Publishing Corporation
http://www.hindawi.com
Hindawi Publishing Corporation
http://www.hindawi.com
Volume 2014
Volume 2014
Submit your manuscripts at
http://www.hindawi.com
The Scientific
World Journal
Journal of
Signal Transduction
Hindawi Publishing Corporation
http://www.hindawi.com
Genetics
Research International
Hindawi Publishing Corporation
http://www.hindawi.com
Volume 2014
Anatomy
Research International
Hindawi Publishing Corporation
http://www.hindawi.com
Volume 2014
Enzyme
Research
Archaea
Hindawi Publishing Corporation
http://www.hindawi.com
Hindawi Publishing Corporation
http://www.hindawi.com
Volume 2014
Volume 2014
Hindawi Publishing Corporation
http://www.hindawi.com
Biochemistry
Research International
International Journal of
Microbiology
Hindawi Publishing Corporation
http://www.hindawi.com
Volume 2014
International Journal of
Evolutionary Biology
Volume 2014
Hindawi Publishing Corporation
http://www.hindawi.com
Volume 2014
Hindawi Publishing Corporation
http://www.hindawi.com
Volume 2014
Molecular Biology
International
Hindawi Publishing Corporation
http://www.hindawi.com
Volume 2014
Advances in
Bioinformatics
Hindawi Publishing Corporation
http://www.hindawi.com
Volume 2014
Journal of
Marine Biology
Volume 2014
Hindawi Publishing Corporation
http://www.hindawi.com
Volume 2014