Social organisms face a high risk of epidemics, and respond to this threat by combining efficient individual and collective defences against pathogens. An intriguing and little studied feature of social animals is that individual pathogen resistance may depend not only on genetic or maternal factors, but also on the social environment during development. Here, we used a cross-fostering experiment to investigate whether the pathogen resistance of individual ant workers was shaped by their own colony of origin or by the colony of origin of their carers. The origin of care-giving workers significantly influenced the ability of newly eclosed cross-fostered Formica selysi workers to resist the fungal entomopathogen Beauveria bassiana. In particu...
Repeated pathogen exposure is a common threat in colonies of social insects, posing selection pressu...
<div><p>Despite the growing number of experimental studies on mechanisms of social immunity in ant s...
Pathogens exert a strong selection pressure on organisms to evolve effective immune defences. In add...
Social organisms face a high risk of epidemics, and respond to this threat by combining efficient in...
Social organisms face a high risk of epidemics, and respond to this threat by combining efficient in...
The phenotype of social animals can be influenced by genetic, maternal and environmental effects, wh...
Due to the omnipresent risk of epidemics, insect societies have evolved sophisticated disease defenc...
Animal societies vary in the number of breeders per group, which affects many socially and ecologica...
The success of social living can be explained, in part, by a group's ability to execute collective b...
Ant queens often associate to found new colonies, yet the benefits of this behaviour remain unclear....
Several ant species vary in the number of queens per colony, yet the causes and consequences of this...
Pathogens are predicted to pose a particular threat to eusocial insects because infections can sprea...
Repeated pathogen exposure is a common threat in colonies of social insects, posing selection pressu...
<div><p>Despite the growing number of experimental studies on mechanisms of social immunity in ant s...
Pathogens exert a strong selection pressure on organisms to evolve effective immune defences. In add...
Social organisms face a high risk of epidemics, and respond to this threat by combining efficient in...
Social organisms face a high risk of epidemics, and respond to this threat by combining efficient in...
The phenotype of social animals can be influenced by genetic, maternal and environmental effects, wh...
Due to the omnipresent risk of epidemics, insect societies have evolved sophisticated disease defenc...
Animal societies vary in the number of breeders per group, which affects many socially and ecologica...
The success of social living can be explained, in part, by a group's ability to execute collective b...
Ant queens often associate to found new colonies, yet the benefits of this behaviour remain unclear....
Several ant species vary in the number of queens per colony, yet the causes and consequences of this...
Pathogens are predicted to pose a particular threat to eusocial insects because infections can sprea...
Repeated pathogen exposure is a common threat in colonies of social insects, posing selection pressu...
<div><p>Despite the growing number of experimental studies on mechanisms of social immunity in ant s...
Pathogens exert a strong selection pressure on organisms to evolve effective immune defences. In add...