Narmin I. Beydizada, Antonia Abels, Patrick Schultheiss, Erik T. Frank
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引用次数: 0
摘要
蚂蚁在觅食或种间竞争时经常会受伤,从而增加了感染风险和受伤者的死亡率。为了避免这种情况,蚂蚁会对受伤的巢友进行伤口护理,作为一种社会免疫。在这项研究中,我们发现 Cataglyphis nodus 沙漠蚂蚁会根据伤口的位置和状态做出不同的伤口护理行为。腿部受伤的蚂蚁得到的伤口护理明显多于触角受伤的蚂蚁。然而,腿部伤口诱发感染的蚂蚁几乎得不到巢友的任何伤口护理,导致其在隔离状态下和在巢内的死亡率相近。相反,这种腿部感染的蚂蚁主要出现在巢外。蚂蚁触角伤口感染后,伤口护理水平没有变化,死亡率也没有增加。我们的研究结果表明,蚂蚁的伤口护理水平可以根据受伤的死亡风险灵活调整。与触角受伤相比,腿部受伤造成感染和死亡的风险更大,这可能是因为伤口面积更大,血管循环增加,需要加强预防性护理以防止感染。尽管 Cataglyphis 蚂蚁的寿命很短,但这项研究首次显示了它们对伤口的护理,并对社会免疫机制提供了重要启示。
Injury-dependent wound care behavior in the desert ant Cataglyphis nodus
Ants often face injuries during foraging, or interspecific competition, elevating infection risk and mortality among the wounded. To avoid this, ants engage in wound care on injured nestmates as a form of social immunity. In this study, we show that Cataglyphis nodus desert ants perform differentiated wound care behavior, depending on wound location and state. Leg-injured ants received significantly more wound care than antenna-injured ants. However, leg wounds with induced infections received barely any wound care from nestmates, leading to similar levels of mortality in isolation and inside the nest. Instead, such leg-infected ants were mainly found outside of the nest. Infections of antennal wounds showed no change in the level of wound care, nor increased mortality. Our results suggest that the level of wound care in ants can be flexibly adjusted to the perceived mortality risk of injuries. Leg injuries pose a greater risk of infection and mortality compared to antennal injuries, likely because of the larger wound area and increased vascular circulation, necessitating intensive prophylactic care to prevent infection. This study is the first to show wound care in Cataglyphis ants, despite their short lifespan, and offers significant insights into social immunity mechanisms.
期刊介绍:
The journal publishes reviews, original contributions and commentaries dealing with quantitative empirical and theoretical studies in the analysis of animal behavior at the level of the individual, group, population, community, and species.