Search results for "Social immunity"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Feces production as a form of social immunity in an insect with facultative maternal care

2015

Background Social animals have the unique capability of mounting social defenses against pathogens. Over the last decades, social immunity has been extensively studied in species with obligatory and permanent forms of social life. However, its occurrence in less derived social systems and thus its role in the early evolution of group-living remains unclear. Here, we investigated whether lining nests with feces is a form of social immunity against microbial growth in the European earwig Forficula auricularia, an insect with temporary family life and facultative maternal care. Results Using a total of 415 inhibition zone assays, we showed that earwig feces inhibit the growth of two GRAM+ bact…

Life Cycle StagesInsectaSocial immunityEarwigFamily lifeBiological Evolution590 Tiere (Zoologie)Feces590 Zoological sciencesAnimalsFemalePrecocialSocial BehaviorInsectEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsResearch Article
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Data from: Surrounding pathogens shape maternal egg care but not egg production in the European earwig

2017

Pathogens are ubiquitous in nature and typically entail major fitness costs in their hosts. These costs can be particularly important when individuals exhibit poor immune defenses, as it is often the case during early developmental stages. Hence, selection should favor parental strategies limiting the risks of pathogen exposure and infection in their offspring. In this study, we investigated 1) whether females of the European earwig Forficula auricularia avoid areas contaminated with spores of the entomopathogenic fungus Metarhizium brunneum prior to and at egg laying, as well as 2) whether spore presence entails an increase in females’ investment into both pre-hatching forms of care and cl…

medicine and health careSubsocialDermapteraembryonic structuresfungiMedicineSocial immunityForficula auriculariaLife sciences
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Data from: Aposematism in the burying beetle? Dual function of anal fluid in parental care and chemical defense

2017

Burying beetles (Nicrophorus vespilloides) bear distinctive and variable orange-black patterning on their elytra and produce an anal exudate from their abdomen when threatened. During breeding, the anal exudates contribute to the antimicrobial defense of the breeding resource. We investigated whether the anal exudates also provide a responsive chemical defense, which is advertised to potential avian predators by the beetle’s orange and black elytral markings. We found that that the orange-black elytral markings of the burying beetle are highly conspicuous for avian predators against range of backgrounds, by using computer simulations. Using bioassays with wood ants, we also showed that the …

medicine and health carevariation in colorationpublic goodswarning signalsChemical defenceSocial immunityMedicineLife sciences
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