1. Fitness costs associated with mounting a social immune response
- Author
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Cotter, S. C., Topham, E., Price, A. J. P., and Kilner, R. M.
- Subjects
C150 Environmental Biology ,C300 Zoology ,animal diseases ,C182 Evolution ,bacteria ,C100 Biology ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,C340 Entomology ,C180 Ecology ,C120 Behavioural Biology - Abstract
Social immune systems comprise immune defences mounted by individuals for the benefit of others (sensu Cotter & Kilner 2010). Just as with other forms of immunity, mounting a social immune response is expected to be costly but so far these fitness costs are unknown. We measured the costs of social immunity in a sub-social burying beetle, a species in which two or more adults defend a carrion breeding resource for their young by smearing the flesh with antibacterial anal exudates. Our experiments on widowed females reveal that a bacterial challenge to the breeding resource upregulates the antibacterial activity of a female’s exudates, and this subsequently reduces her lifetime reproductive success. We suggest that the costliness of social immunity is a source of evolutionary conflict between breeding adults on a carcass, and that the phoretic communities that the beetles transport between carrion may assist the beetle by offsetting these costs.
- Published
- 2010