1. Emigrating Together but Not Establishing Together: A Cockroach Rides Ants and Leaves.
- Author
-
Phillips, Zachary I.
- Subjects
- *
LEAF-cutting ants , *COCKROACHES , *ANT colonies , *ANTS , *ROACH (Fish) , *QUEEN honeybees , *HITCHHIKING - Abstract
Symbionts of ant colonies can hitchhike on winged ant reproductives (alates) during colony nuptial flights. Attaphila fungicola Wheeler, a miniature cockroach that lives in the nests of Texas leaf-cutter ants (Atta texana Buckley), hitchhikes on female alates (winged queens). Hitchhiking roaches are presumably vertically transmitted from leaf-cutter parent colonies to daughter colonies, remaining with female alates as they transition into foundresses (workerless queens); however, foundresses have limited resources and high mortality rates. Rather than remaining with foundresses likely to die (vertical transmission), roaches might abandon them during dispersal to infect higher-quality later stages of colony development (female alate–vectored transmission). In field experiments, I find evidence for female alate–vectored transmission and discover that roaches use a second hitchhiking step (riding foraged plant material) to infect established colonies. This work reveals a novel relationship between host dispersal and symbiont transmission and shows that colony development can be an important selection pressure on transmission. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF