Credit: Current Biology / Takasuka et al
Scientists
document a new form of host manipulation where an invading, parasitic ant queen
"tricks" ant workers into killing their queen mother. The invading
ant integrates herself into the nest by pretending to be a member of the
colony, then sprays the host queen with fluid that causes her daughters to turn
against her. The parasitic queen then usurps the throne, having the workers
serve her instead as the new queen regent. This work was published in Current Biology on November 17.
"At first, I wanted the title of
this study to exemplify a fable where a daughter is tricked into killing their
mother. I asked ChatGPT if this kind of matricide appears in a fictional story,
but it said no such story exists," says lead author Keizo Takasuka of
Kyushu University. "So, this is an example of nature going beyond what
we've seen in fiction."
Matricide, a behavior where offspring
kill or eat their mother, is a rarely seen phenomenon in nature. Despite
appearing maladaptive at first glance, it does offer advantages by either
nourishing the young and giving the mother indirect benefits through increased
offspring survival or allowing the young to invest in offspring of their own.
"Up until now, only two types of matricide have been recorded in which either the mother or offspring benefit. In this novel matricide that we reported, neither profit; only the parasitic third party," says Takasuka.
Unwitting matricidal ants. Credit: Current
Biology / Takasuka et al
The ants Lasius orientalis and
umbratus, commonly referred to as the "bad-smell ants" in Japanese,
are so-called "social parasites" that execute a covert operation to
infiltrate and eventually take over the colony of their unsuspecting ant queen hosts, Lasius flavus and japonicus,
respectively. The parasitic queen takes advantage of ants' reliance on smell to
identify both friends and foes to dupe unsuspecting worker ants into believing she is part of the family.
"Ants live in the world of
odors," says Takasuka. "Before infiltrating the nest, the parasitic
queen stealthily acquires the colony's odor on her body from workers walking
outside so that she is not recognized as the enemy."
Ant species taking over another's
colony using scent as cover is not a new phenomenon; there are many examples of
ant social parasitism where, after entering a colony, a parasitic queen will
directly kill the colony's queen and convince the workers to serve her instead.
There have even been prior reports of workers killing their queen in response
to a social parasite's presence, but only now have the actions that cause this
matricidal behavior been observed.
Once these "bad-smell"
ants have been accepted by the colony's workers and locate the queen, the
parasitic ant douses her with a foul-smelling chemical researchers presume to
be formic acid—a chemical unique to some ants and stored in a specialized
organ.
"The parasitic ants exploit
that ability to recognize odors, we believe, by spraying formic acid to
disguise the queen's normal scent with a repugnant one. This causes the
daughters, who normally protected their queen mother, to attack her as an enemy,"
Takasuka says.
Then, like fleeing the scene of the
crime, the parasitic queen immediately (but temporarily) retreats. "She
knows the odor of formic acid is very dangerous, because if host workers
perceive the odor they would immediately attack her as well."
She will periodically return and
spray the queen multiple times until the workers have killed and disposed of
their mother queen. Then, once the dust has settled, the parasitic ant queen
returns and begins laying eggs of her own. With this newly accepted parasitic
queen in the colony and no other queen to compete with, the matricidal workers
begin taking care of her and her offspring instead.
Now that this kind of behavior has been captured on video, Takasuka and his research team will explore how far this unique form of matricide extends, and whether it can be found in other insects outside of ants. "Only ants in the subfamily Formicinae use formic acid to elicit violent responses, but I don't rule out the possibility that non-formic-acidic ants and social wasps commit matricide in similar ways," Takasuka says.
Source: Parasitic ant tricks workers into killing their queen, then takes the throne

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