Abstract
Myrmecophiles (i.e. organisms that associate with ants) use a variety of ecological niches and employ different strategies to survive encounters with ants. Because ants are typically excellent defenders, myrmecophiles may choose moments of weakness to take advantage of their ant associates. This hypothesis was studied in the rove beetle,
Myrmedonota xipe
, which associates with
Azteca sericeasur
ants in the presence of parasitoid flies. A combination of laboratory and field experiments show that
M. xipe
beetles selectively locate and prey upon parasitized ants. These parasitized ants are less aggressive towards beetles than healthy ants, allowing beetles to eat the parasitized ants alive without interruption. Moreover, behavioural assays and chemical analysis reveal that
M. xipe
are attracted to the ant's alarm pheromone, the same secretion used by the phorid fly parasitoids in host location. This strategy allows beetles access to an abundant but otherwise inaccessible resource, as
A. sericeasur
ants are typically highly aggressive. These results are the first, to our knowledge, to demonstrate a predator sharing cues with a parasitoid to gain access to an otherwise unavailable prey item. Furthermore, this work highlights the importance of studying ant–myrmecophile interactions beyond just their pairwise context.
Funder
National Science Foundation
UC Mexus Research Fellowship
National Institutes of Health
Robert Van den Bosch Fellowship
the Edna & Yoshinori Tanada Fellowship
Margaret C. Walker fund
U.S. Department of Agriculture
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine
Cited by
7 articles.
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