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Sociality and Disease Resistance Rosengaus et al. 1998. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 44:125-134.

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Presentation on theme: "Sociality and Disease Resistance Rosengaus et al. 1998. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 44:125-134."— Presentation transcript:

1 Sociality and Disease Resistance Rosengaus et al. 1998. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 44:125-134.

2 Cost/Benefit of Sociality: Disease Social Organization: Cost Increased Contact Between Individuals Greater Transmission of Direct-Contact Pathogens Social Organization: Benefit Allogrooming Remove Parasites, Spores Antibiotic Transfer

3 Rosengaus et al (1998) Wood-dwelling social insects (termites and ants) Live and/or feed in diverse microbial community Includes pathogens Controlled microclimate, Good for pathogen growth Social adaptations to disease?

4 Rosengaus et al (1998) Dampwood termite Zootermopsis angusticollis Entomopathogenic fungus Metarhizium amisopliae Infection can be lethal

5 Rosengaus et al (1998) Spray water/conidiospores on filter paper Control: water only Termites walk on paper for one hour Transfer to groups, size = 1, 10, 25 10 – 25, Similar to young, developing colony

6 Rosengaus et al (1998) Treatment groups: Environmentally exposed: blue Differentiate any mortality Direct vs contact exposure Monitored survival/mortality for 20 days

7 Rosengaus et al (1998) Open square: Control Closed square: G = 1 Circle: G = 10 Triangle: G = 25

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9 Rosengaus et al (1998) Social group: significantly higher survival Allogrooming: Before/after spores appeared

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12 Rosengaus et al (1998) 53-fold increase in allogrooming 24 hours after exposure Remove spores from cuticle Saliva may inhibit spore viability Discovered new ‘vibratory” display


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