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Coevolution in host-parasite systems: Behavioural strategies of slave-making ants and their hosts

Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, ISSN: 1471-2970, Vol: 268, Issue: 1472, Page: 1139-1146
2001
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Article Description

Recently, avian brood parasites and their hosts have emerged as model systems for the study of hostparasite coevolution. However, empirical studies of the highly analogous social parasites, which use the workers of another eusocial species to raise their own young, have never explicitly examined the dynamics of these systems from a coevolutionary perspective. Here, we demonstrate interpopulational variation in behavioural interactions between a socially parasitic slave-maker ant and its host that is consistent with the expectations of host-parasite coevolution. Parasite pressure, as inferred by the size, abundance and raiding frequency of Protomognathus americanus colonies, was highest in a New York population of the host Leptothorax longispinosus and lowest in a West Virginia population. As host-parasite coevolutionary theory would predict, we found that the slave-makers and the hosts from New York were more effective at raiding and defending against raiders, respectively, than were conspecifics from the West Virginia population. Some of these variations in efficacy were brought about by apparently simple shifts in behaviour. These results demonstrate that defence mechanisms against social parasites can evolve, and they give the first indications of the existence of a coevolutionary arms race between a social parasite and its host.

Bibliographic Details

Susanne Foitzik; Christopher J. DeHeer; Daniel N. Hunjan; Joan M. Herbers

The Royal Society

Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology; Immunology and Microbiology; Environmental Science; Agricultural and Biological Sciences

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