PLB143 - Lecture 13
Non-Human Farmers:
Ants, Termites, and Beetles
© L. Saxe and P. Gepts 2008
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Readings
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Additional readings:
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Batra, L.R. 1966. Ambrosia fungi:
extent of specificity to ambrosia beetles. Science 153.
193-195.
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Buckley, R.C. 1987. Interactions
involving plants, homoptera, and ants. Annual review
of ecology and systematics 18. 111-135.
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Currie, C.R., J.A. Scott, R.C.
Summerbell, D. Malloch.1999. Fungus-growing ants use
antibiotic-producing bacteria to control garden parasites.
Nature 398: 701-704.
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Currie, C.R., U.G. Mueller, D.
Malloch. 1999. The agricultural pathology of ant fungus
gardens. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 96:
7998-8002.
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Dangerfield, J. Mark; Schuurman, Gregor.
2000. Foraging by fungus-growing termites (Isoptera: Termitidae,
macrotermitinae) in the Okavango Delta, Botswana. Journal of
Tropical Ecology 16 (5): 717-731.
(pdf format)
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Diamond, J. 1998. Ants, crops and
history. Science. 281 (September 25): 1974-1975.
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Garling, Lyn. Origin of ant-fungus
mutualism: a new hypothesis. Biotropica 11(4): 284-291.
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Jones, C.G., J.H. Lawton, M. Shachak.
1994. Organism as ecosystem engineers. OIKOS 69: 373-386.
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Korb, Judith; Linsenmair, Karl Eduard.
2001. The causes of spatial patterning of mounds of a fungus-cultivating
termite: Results from nearest-neighbour analysis and ecological
studies. In: Oecologia 127 (3): 324-333.
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Laws, R.M. 1970. Elephants as agents
of habitat and landscape change in East Africa. OIKOS.
21. 1-15.
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Matsuura, K.; Tanaka, C.; Nishida,
T. 2000. Symbiosis of a termite and a sclerotium-forming
fungus: Sclerotia mimic termite eggs.
Ecological Research. 15 (4): 405-414.
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Milius, S. 1998. Old MacDonald
was an ant. Science News 154(November 21): 334.
- Mueller, U.G., S.A. Rehner, and T.R. Schultz. 1998. The evolution of agriculture in ants. Science 281: 2034- 2038.
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Nash, D. 2002. Information on Lycaenid-ant
relationship
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Pierce, N.E. 1986. Lycaenid butterflies
and ants: two-species stable equilibria in mutualistic,
commensal, and parasitic interactions. The American Naturalist
128(2): 216-227.
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Pierce, N.E. 1987. The evolution
biogeography of associations between lycaenid butterflies
and ants. Oxford Surveys in Evolutionary Biology. 4. 89-95.
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Stadler, B. and A.F.G. Dixon. 1998.
Cost of attendance for aphids. Journal of Animal Ecology
67(3) 454-459.
- Presentation slides
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Pre-agriculture: Animals
that alter their environment to enhance the growth of plants
of interest
Pre-agricultural societies altered their environment
to promote the growth of desired plants:
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See also: Lecture 3: California Indian
tribes fiber production of deergrass (Muhlenbergia rigens
) (Anderson, 1996)
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African Bush Elephants
(Laws, 1970)
- African Bush Elephants –
95% of diet is grass
- Needs large areas of grassland,
but optimum diet no more than 50% grass – takes out Acacias
so that they can maintain grass
- In forests elephants found
to destroy trees so that there is favorable growth of Cynometra
alexandrii – the elephant induced “climax species”
for their diet
Characteristics of an Organism Able to do Agriculture
- non-specialized
diet (ants, elephants)
- social organisms
- close relationship
with organism that is used for food
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Animal Agriculture or Ranching (animal tending by
other animals) – analogous to milk cows
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Ants herding aphids – for honeydew (Buckley, 1987) (
Stadler and Dixon, 1998
)
- Ants collect honeydew from the aphids.
- Just as humans cannot get at the cellulose in plants
directly, but use cows to digest the cellulose, ants collect
plant carbohydrates and the ants are able to utilize it.
- Ant herding scale insects
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- Ant herding an aphid
- Ant collecting honeydew
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Ants tending to caterpillars (Lycaenids) – for secretions
(Pierce, 1987) (
Pierce, 1986
)
- 50% of Lycaenid species are associated with ants
- Lycaenid caterpillars are taken into ant colonies
and raised for their excretions
- Larvae of Lycaenids have glands that
excrete substance that communicate with ants – pore cupolas
- The pore cupolas exist all over the
surface of the larvae – this substance communicates to the ants
that they should not attack the larvae
- A dorsal organ secretes a sweet substance – the ants
harvest this sweet substance
- Some species of Lycaenids are parasites
of the ants, rather than providing the sweet excretions benefiting
the ants
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- Ant tending to a caterpillar
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Crop Agriculture (Plant or fungus cultivation
by animals)
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Leaf-Cutter Ants - (Mueller et al., 1998)
- Evolved one time 50,000 million years ago in the American
tropics with attines ants domesticating fungi in the family Lepiotacea
- The ants travel from the nest to trees and plants
and collect leaves and flowers
- They go back to the nest and chew up vegetation and serve the
partially chewed plant and saliva to the fungi in the fungus
garden
- They develop their fungus garden on a bed of chewed
vegetation
- Fungus can break down cellulose and thus provides the ants
access to the fungus
- The ants prune back the hyphae to prevent the fungi
from producing reproductive structures and to stimulate swollen
hyphal tips called gangylidia
Parallels to Human Agriculture
- The ants cultivate the fungus and move – queens
establish the fungus in new their new colonies
- The ants fertilize the fungus – leaving excrement
as a source of nitrogen
- The ants weed the fungus – remove the unwanted fungi
through volatile signals, mechanical removal, and fungicides
- Biocontrol - Antibiotic producing bacteria (
Streptomycetes ) grow on the cuticle of the ant, producing
anti-bacterial substance specific to the weed fungus, Escovopis
- Pruning - promotion of gangylidia
- Specialized labor force – certain ants gather leaves,
other process leaves, others harvest fungi
- New fungal species are sometimes used – parallel
to selection and crop improvement
A queen and her fungi
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- Ants transporting leaf cuttings
- Ants transporting petal cuttings
- Fungus garden
- Swollen hyphal tips or gangylidia
- Streptomyces on ant
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Termites (Matsura et al, 2000)
- Fungi cultivating termites found in tropical Africa
and Asia
- The fungus they cultivate is Termitomyces
Termitomyces is grown in special chambers degrading lignin
components of solid excrement of the termite
- The termites water their fungal gardens with termite
excretions and thus maintain the necessary humidity for fungal
growth
- The termites building ventilation ducts into their
mound so that the fungi are properly aerated
- Pruning – to form nodules on the fungus that are
consumed by the fungus
- When it rains the termites take a bit of the mycellium
outside of the mound. Upon the development of a mushroom,
the termites take a bit mushroom tissue and culture it in
their new mound (note the mushroom is probably cross fertilized
and thus the termites are maintaining a level of genetic diversity
of their mushroom crop).
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- Termite mound in Darwin, Northern
Territory, Australia
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Ambrosia Beetles (Batra, 1966)
- Ambrosia beetles carry fungus with them in a specialized
structure called a mycangium
- They plant the fungus in their galley by inoculating
wood with the fungus
- The Ambrosia Beetle is dependent on their cultivated
fungi for food
- The fungus is only found in active galleys
- Like leaf-cutter ants, they weed and prune the
fungus
Mycangial fungus growing on wood
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- Ambrosia beetles
- Mycangium
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Ambrosia beetles vs. Bark beetles
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Ambrosia beetles
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Bark beetles
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| Use numerous taxa |
Specialize on few taxa
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Associated fungi: Ambrosiella and Raffaelea
are not pathogens
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Associated fungi: quickly infect host plants
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Larvae eat gregariously in the fungus garden
– allows generalist use of several different host species.
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Larvae eat in isolation in the phloem – results
in specialization to single host species.
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A comparison between Non-Human versus Human Agriculture
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- Cultivate soil:
- Ants: add chewed leaves to fungus garden
- Termites: water and aerate fungus garden
- Produce crop
- Ants, termites, and beetles all produces a fungal crop
- Raise livestock
- Ants raise aphids and Lycaenid caterpillar
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Domestication of Fungal Species (Mueller et al 1998)
- Fungal Propagation
- Some active maintenance of genetic diversity in the fungal
crop
- Clonal propagation
- Fungi: Evidence for four separate domestications
- The queen carries a pellet of fungus from her natal nest
to her new garden
- Many cultivars propagated
How did agriculture start? (see
Lecture 4
)
- Sauer (1952): Six suppositions of the conditions under which
agriculture started
- Anderson (1954): Weeds as potential domesticates – ‘dump heap
theory’
- Boserup (1965): Agriculture as a response to high population
density
- Flannery: Broad Spectrum Revolution
- Harlan (1992): No Model Model
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Hearths of domestication are to be sought in areas of marked diversity
of plants and animals (Sauer, 1952)
- Ants have developed at least 553 cultivars of farmable fungi
coming from 7 genera
- 12 genera of New World ants belonging to the tribe Attine farm
fungus
- The New World is a center for the diversity of these fungal
species
Inventors of agriculture already had acquired special skills in
other directions predisposing them to agricultural experiments (Sauer,
1952)
- Fungus farming ants developed from seed storing ants.
AND/OR
- Fungus farming ants developed from a group of predaceous ants
(Garling, 1979)
Founders of agriculture: sedentary, fishing tribes near fresh water
(Sauer, 1952)
- Societal structure...the fact that ants, termites, and ambrosia
beetles are social animals is important to their development of agriculture
Weeds as Potential Domesticates (Anderson, 1954)
- Garling (1979) Review of Ant-Fungus Relationship Hypotheses:
- Attine ants derived from a group of predacious ants living
in logs
- First fungus-eaters ate fungus growing on their feces instead
of going out and hunting
- Like weeds that prefer disturbed, nutrient-rich environments,
these fungi grow with the ants in a nutrient-rich environment
Agriculture as a resul of an Increase in Population (Boserup, 1965)
- Ants live at high density whether they farm fungus or not, thus
it may not be a response to population
Broad Spectrum Revolution (Flannery)
- Ants’ omnivory allowed them to shift diet to fungal species
pre-adapted for living in disturbed environments
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Conclusions
- Humans were not the first species to develop agriculture.
- Some species are “ecosystem engineers” and alter their environment
to facilitate the growth of plants and fungus that are particularly
beneficial to them (Bush Elephants)
- Ants, termites, and beetles have all developed food production
systems analogous to agriculture and, as in humans, this has
allowed specialization and high population density.
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