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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Heavy metal pollution disturbs immune response in wild ant populations

Liisa M. RantalaMarkus J. RantalaMarkus J. RantalaJouni SorvariHarri HakkarainenTapio Eeva

subject

Immune defensePollutantAntsEcologyHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisEnvironmental ExposureGeneral Medicinebiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionMetal pollutionBiologyContaminationToxicologybiology.organism_classificationPollutionANTFormica aquiloniaFatsImmune systemChemical IndustryMetals HeavyAnimalsBody SizeEnvironmental PollutantsImmunocompetenceInvertebrate

description

Concern about the effects of environmental contaminants on immune function in both humans and wildlife is growing and practically nothing is known about this impact on terrestrial invertebrates, even though they are known to easily accumulate pollutants. We studied the effect of industrial heavy metal contamination on immune defense of a free-living wood ant (Formica aquilonia). To find out whether ants show an adapted immune function in a polluted environment, we compared encapsulation responses between local and translocated colonies. Local colonies showed higher heavy metal levels than the translocated ones but the encapsulation response was similar between the two groups, indicating that the immune system of local ants has not adapted to high contamination level. The encapsulation response was elevated in moderate whereas suppressed in high heavy metal levels suggesting higher risk for infections in heavily polluted areas. 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2006.03.004