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A social parasite's classy mimicry

welcome encroachment
Last Updated 10 August 2015, 18:47 IST

An ant colony is an insect fortress: When enemies invade, soldier ants quickly detect the incursion and rip their foes apart with their oversize mandibles. But some invaders manage to slip in with ease, none more mystifyingly than the ant nest beetle.

Adult beetles stride into an ant colony in search of a mate, without being
harassed. They lay eggs, from which larvae hatch. As far as scientists can tell, workers feed the young beetles as if they were ants. When the beetles grow into adults, the ants swarm around them, grooming their bodies. In exchange for this hospitality, the beetles sink their jaws into ant larvae and freshly moulted adults in order to drink their body fluids.

“They are like vampire beetles wandering in the ant nests,” said Andrea Di Giulio, an entomologist at Roma Tre University in Rome. Andrea and his colleagues have now uncovered a remarkable trick that the beetles use to fool their hosts. It turns out they can perform uncanny impressions, mimicking a range of ant calls.

Andrea and his colleagues study a species of ant nest beetle called Paussus favieri, which lives in the Atlas Mountains of Morocco, where it infiltrates the nests of Moroccan ants, known as Pheidole pallidula.

Distinctive calls
Like many ant species, Pheidole pallidula makes noises by rubbing its legs against ridges on its body. The meanings of these signals vary from species to species;
leaf-cutting ants summon bodyguards for the march back to the nest; in other species, a queen trills to her workers to attend to her.

Scientists have found that Pheidole pallidula ants make three distinct sounds, each produced by a different caste: soldiers, workers and the queen. Andrea and his colleagues noticed that the unwelcome guests, the ant nest beetles Paussus favieri, also have ridges on their bodies, suggesting that they too can make sounds. This was odd; related beetles that do not invade ant nests do not have this kind of anatomy.

So, the scientists set the beetles on top of microphones and listened carefully. The beetles began to sing, as the researchers had suspected they could. But to their surprise, the beetles did not produce just a single call. Instead, they made three distinct kinds of sounds, each closely resembling the one made by a different ant caste. “We were expecting only a very simple sound,” said Andrea. “We were stunned by finding such a complex pattern of signals.”

He and his colleagues wondered if the beetles were mimicking the ants in order to trick them. They installed a miniature loudspeaker in a chamber and buried it in sand, then put ants in the chamber and played beetle calls through the speaker. “The ants did not respond by attacking. Instead, they crawled toward the sound to investigate, waving their antenna in a pattern they use only to detect fellow ants. Then they started digging to the speaker, like they were rescuing somebody,” said Andrea. The scientists published their findings this month in the journal PLOS One, published by the Public Library of Science.

The deception of it
“The ability of ant nest beetles to fully integrate into ant society has fascinated and mystified scientists for decades,” said Wendy Moore, an entomologist at the
University of Arizona who was not involved in the study. “The results are wonderfully surprising.”

Andrea suspects that the ant nest beetles combine the sounds with other forms of deception. They grow massive antennae that are packed with glands, for example, which may release chemicals that mimic the ones made by ants. But he can not yet say why the beetles have evolved such an elaborate repertoire of ant calls.

It is possibile that they use different calls to manipulate the ants in different ways. The beetles may mimic soldier calls to ensure they do not get attacked, for example. The queen call, on the other hand, may elicit royal treatment.

Scientists refer to ant nest beetles as social parasites. Instead of infecting a
single host’s body, they hijack an entire society. Andrea said the new findings demonstrate just how impressive parasites can be.

“When we think about parasites, we are reminded of unpleasant, simplified
creatures,” he said. “But in this case, the parasite is actually more complex than
related beetles that are not parasites.”

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(Published 10 August 2015, 17:08 IST)

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