Search results for "SOCIAL INSECT"

showing 3 items of 23 documents

Data from: The parasite’s long arm: a tapeworm parasite induces behavioural changes in uninfected group members of its social host

2015

Parasites can induce alterations in host phenotypes in order to enhance their own survival and transmission. Parasites of social insects might not only benefit from altering their individual hosts, but also from inducing changes in uninfected group members. Temnothorax nylanderi ant workers infected with the tapeworm Anomotaenia brevis are known to be chemically distinct from nestmates and do not contribute to colony fitness, but are tolerated in their colonies and well cared-for. Here, we investigated how infected workers affect colony aggression by manipulating the presence of tapeworm-infected workers and analysing whether their absence or presence resulted in behavioural alterations in …

medicine and health caresocial insectsextended phenotypeaggressionLife SciencesMedicinerecognitionparasite-induced alterations
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Data from: Gene expression is more strongly associated with behavioural specialisation than with age or fertility in ant workers

2018

The ecological success of social insects is based on division of labour, not only between queens and workers, but also among workers. Whether a worker tends the brood or forages is influenced by age, fertility and nutritional status, with brood carers being younger, more fecund and more corpulent. Here, we experimentally disentangle behavioural specialisation from age and fertility in Temnothorax longispinosus ant workers and analyse how these parameters are linked to whole-body gene expression. A total of 3644 genes were associated with behavioural specialisation which is ten times more than associated with age and 50 times more than associated with fertility. Brood carers were characteriz…

medicine and health caresocial insectsfungibehavior and behavior mechanismsLife SciencesMedicineTemnothorax longispinosusDivision of labourRNAseqreproductive and urinary physiology
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Size-related mortality during overwintering in cavity-nesting ant colonies (Hymenoptera: Formicidae)

2016

The ongoing process of climate change will result in higher temperatures during winter and therefore might increase the survival of overwintering invertebrates. However, the process may also lead to a reduction in snow cover and expose overwintering invertebrates to lower temperatures, which could result in higher mortality. During a field experiment, I investigated the effects of a reduction in snow cover on the survival of the ant Temnothorax crassispinus, which overwinters in nests located on the ground. Ant colonies differed in the survival rate of the workers in the experimental (from which snow cover was removed) and control group. In the control group, the survival rate was unrelated…

survival rate0106 biological sciencesField experimentHymenopteratemnothorax crassispinus010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesSurvival rateOverwinteringInvertebratesocial insectsbiologyEcologysnow coverAnt colonybiology.organism_classificationSnowoverwinteringANTformicidae010602 entomologyQL1-991Insect SciencehymenopteraZoologyhuman activitiesEuropean Journal of Entomology
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