Trade-offs between immunity and competitive ability in fighting ant males.

Sina Metzler, Jessica Kirchner, Anna V Grasse, Sylvia Cremer
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Abstract

Background: Fighting disease while fighting rivals exposes males to constraints and trade-offs during male-male competition. We here tested how both the stage and intensity of infection with the fungal pathogen Metarhizium robertsii interfere with fighting success in Cardiocondyla obscurior ant males. Males of this species have evolved long lifespans during which they can gain many matings with the young queens of the colony, if successful in male-male competition. Since male fights occur inside the colony, the outcome of male-male competition can further be biased by interference of the colony's worker force.

Results: We found that severe, but not yet mild, infection strongly impaired male fighting success. In late-stage infection, this could be attributed to worker aggression directed towards the infected rather than the healthy male and an already very high male morbidity even in the absence of fighting. Shortly after pathogen exposure, however, male mortality was particularly increased during combat. Since these males mounted a strong immune response, their reduced fighting success suggests a trade-off between immune investment and competitive ability already early in the infection. Even if the males themselves showed no difference in the number of attacks they raised against their healthy rivals across infection stages and levels, severely infected males were thus losing in male-male competition from an early stage of infection on.

Conclusions: Males of the ant C. obscurior have a well-developed immune system that raises a strong immune response very fast after fungal exposure. This allows them to cope with mild pathogen exposures without compromising their success in male-male competition, and hence to gain multiple mating opportunities with the emerging virgin queens of the colony. Under severe infection, however, they are weak fighters and rarely survive a combat already at early infection when raising an immune response, as well as at progressed infection, when they are morbid and preferentially targeted by worker aggression. Workers thereby remove males that pose a future disease threat by biasing male-male competition. Our study thus reveals a novel social immunity mechanism how social insect workers protect the colony against disease risk.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

在对抗雄蚁的免疫和竞争能力之间的权衡。
背景:在对抗对手的同时对抗疾病使男性在男性竞争中受到限制和权衡。我们在这里测试了感染真菌病原体罗伯特绿僵菌的阶段和强度如何影响隐性心髁突雄性的战斗成功。这个物种的雄性已经进化出了很长的寿命,在此期间,如果在雄性竞争中成功,它们可以与殖民地的年轻女王进行多次交配。由于雄性争斗发生在蚁群内部,因此雄性竞争的结果可能会因蚁群工蜂的干扰而进一步受到影响。结果:我们发现严重而非轻微的感染严重影响了雄性的战斗成功。在感染后期,这可归因于工人对受感染者而不是健康男性的攻击,即使在没有战斗的情况下,男性发病率也已经很高了。然而,在接触病原体后不久,男性的死亡率在战斗中特别增加。由于这些雄性进行了强烈的免疫反应,它们的战斗成功率降低表明在感染早期就已经在免疫投资和竞争能力之间进行了权衡。即使雄性在感染阶段和水平上对健康对手的攻击次数没有差异,但感染严重的雄性从感染早期开始就在雄性竞争中处于劣势。结论:雄性暗隐蚁具有发达的免疫系统,在接触真菌后迅速产生强烈的免疫反应。这使它们能够应对轻微的病原体暴露,而不会影响它们在雄性竞争中的成功,从而获得与殖民地新兴的处女女王的多次交配机会。然而,在严重感染下,它们是弱的战士,很少能在早期感染时引起免疫反应的战斗中存活下来,在感染进展时,它们是病态的,是工人攻击的优先目标。因此,工人们通过使男性与男性之间的竞争偏向,将那些在未来构成疾病威胁的男性移走。因此,我们的研究揭示了一种新的社会免疫机制,即社会性昆虫工蜂如何保护群体免受疾病风险的侵害。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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