Bula da glândula metapleural de formigas cortadeiras: inferências quanto à defesa antimicrobiana / Bulla of the metapleural glands of leafcutter ants: Inferences as the antimicrobial defences

AUTOR(ES)
DATA DE PUBLICAÇÃO

2008

RESUMO

Leafcutter ants live in a world of complex interactions, the most notable being their cultivation of a mutualistic fungus on vegetable subtrates. These ants, and their mutualistic fungus gardens, are at risk from attack by parasitic microorganisms. To defend themselves and their mutualist, they have antimicrobial defences, such as substances secreted from their metapleural glands. As this defence is subject to selective pressures according to the risk of parasite attack, variations in the amount of defence may reflect variations in the risk. Meanwhile, there may be variation in the value of individual workers to the colony, dependent in part upon the area in which they work, and investment in their defences may also reflect this. In this study, the volume of the externally visible part (bulla) of the reservoir of the metapleural gland of workers was compared betwen species, colonies and tasks, to determine variations in defence strategies against pathogens. Additionally, colony sizes of a bacterial mutualist on the workers thoraxes, were estimated, looking for a possible relationship with metapleural gland bulla size. A total of eleven laboratory colonies were used, of four species of leafcutter ants: Atta laevigata (F.Smith, 1858), Atta sexdens rubropilosa Forel, 1908, Acromyrmex subterraneus brunneus (Forel, 1911) and Acromyrmex disciger (Mayr, 1887). Workers were collected from three areas of the colonies: foraging areas, symbiotic fungus gardens and the refuse deposits. Parameters measured were: the volume of the bulla of the metapleural gland, the weight of ants and an estimate of the olony sizes of the symbiotic bacteria. Analyses of covariance were conducted using individual mass as a covariate, to determine the contributions of a range of parameters in explaining variation in the size of this organ. The two species of Atta were found to have larger bulla when compared to the two species of Acromyrmex., probably reflecting not a greater degree of exposure to parasites but a strategy of greater investment in defences. Gardeners and foragers of the species A. laevigata and Ac. subterraneus brunneus had larger bulla than did waste workers, revealing a lower quality (in terms of parasite defence) of the waste workers. In this case, we expect that these individuals, being of lower quality, are allocated to more dangerous tasks, to die more rapidly. Acromyrmex subterraneus brunneus was the only species with visible colonies of the bacterial mutualist on the thorax. There was a positive relation between the size of this colony and the volume of the bulla of the metapleural gland. These variations in degrees of defence imply that the ants have different strategies to defend their colonies against pathogens and parasites.

ASSUNTO(S)

formigas cortadeiras defesa antimicrobiana leafcutter ants metapleural glands glândula metapleural antimicrobial defences ecologia

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