Group size rather than social status influences personal immune efficacy in a socially polymorphic bee

Author:

Nguyen Thi Thu Ha12,Asano Tsukani1,Cronin Adam L.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Sciences, Tokyo Metropolitan University, Hachioji, Tokyo, 192-0397, Japan

2. Center for Bee Research and Animal Technology Transfer, National Institute of Animal Science, Hanoi, 12112, Vietnam

Abstract

The evolution of group living is associated with increased pressure from parasites and pathogens. This can be offset by greater investment in personal immune defences and/or the development of cooperative immune defences (social immunity). An enduring question in evolutionary biology is whether social-immune benefits arose in response to an increased need in more complex societies, or arose early in group living and helped facilitate the evolution of more complex societies. In this study, we shed light on this question through investigating how immunity varies intraspecifically in a socially polymorphic bee. Using a novel immune assay, we show that personal antibacterial efficacy in individuals from social nests is higher than that of solitary individuals, but that this can be explained by higher densities in social nests. We conclude that personal immune effects are likely to play a role in the social/solitary transition in this species. These patterns are consistent with the idea that social immunity evolved secondarily, following the evolution of group living. The flexibility of the individual immune system may have favoured a reliance on its use during the facultative phase early in social evolution.

Funder

Tokyo Metropolitan University

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)

Reference39 articles.

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3. Schmid-Hempel P. 1998 Parasites in social insects. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

4. Sociality and health: impacts of sociality on disease susceptibility and transmission in animal and human societies

5. Social immunity and the evolution of group living in insects

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