Sociality increases exposure to pathogens. Therefore, social insects have developed a wide range of behavioural defences, known as 'social immunity'. However, the benefits of these behaviours in terms of colony survival have been scarcely investigated. We tested the survival advantage of prophylaxis, i.e. corpse removal, in ants. Over 50 days, we compared the survival of ants in colonies that were free to remove corpses with those that were restricted in their corpse removal. From Day 8 onwards, the survival of adult workers was significantly higher in colonies that were allowed to remove corpses normally. Overall, larvae survived better than adults, but were slightly affected by the presence of corpses in the nest. When removal was restric...
In social groups, infections have the potential to spread rapidly and cause disease outbreaks. Here,...
Due to the omnipresent risk of epidemics, insect societies have evolved sophisticated disease defenc...
Abstract Workers in social insects perform different roles, and the environment they experience diff...
peer reviewedSociality increases exposure to pathogens. Therefore, social insects have developed a w...
Ants have developed prophylactic and hygienic behaviours in order to limit risks of pathogenic outbr...
Sociality increases risks of disease transmission as genetically related individuals live in a confi...
Abstract: Group-living species have to deal with higher risks of exposure to pathogens and of diseas...
<div><p>Despite the growing number of experimental studies on mechanisms of social immunity in ant s...
SummaryLife in a social group increases the risk of disease transmission [1–3]. To counteract this t...
To fight infectious diseases, host immune defences are employed at multiple levels. Sanitary behavio...
Social insects not only live altruistically, they die so: a new study reveals that moribund ants aba...
peer reviewedThe division of labour plays a major role in the success of social insects. For instanc...
Background: Social insects form densely crowded societies in environments with high pathogen loads, ...
Many animals use antimicrobials to prevent or cure disease [1,2]. For example, some animals will ing...
Social insects protect their colonies from infectious disease through collective defences that resul...
In social groups, infections have the potential to spread rapidly and cause disease outbreaks. Here,...
Due to the omnipresent risk of epidemics, insect societies have evolved sophisticated disease defenc...
Abstract Workers in social insects perform different roles, and the environment they experience diff...
peer reviewedSociality increases exposure to pathogens. Therefore, social insects have developed a w...
Ants have developed prophylactic and hygienic behaviours in order to limit risks of pathogenic outbr...
Sociality increases risks of disease transmission as genetically related individuals live in a confi...
Abstract: Group-living species have to deal with higher risks of exposure to pathogens and of diseas...
<div><p>Despite the growing number of experimental studies on mechanisms of social immunity in ant s...
SummaryLife in a social group increases the risk of disease transmission [1–3]. To counteract this t...
To fight infectious diseases, host immune defences are employed at multiple levels. Sanitary behavio...
Social insects not only live altruistically, they die so: a new study reveals that moribund ants aba...
peer reviewedThe division of labour plays a major role in the success of social insects. For instanc...
Background: Social insects form densely crowded societies in environments with high pathogen loads, ...
Many animals use antimicrobials to prevent or cure disease [1,2]. For example, some animals will ing...
Social insects protect their colonies from infectious disease through collective defences that resul...
In social groups, infections have the potential to spread rapidly and cause disease outbreaks. Here,...
Due to the omnipresent risk of epidemics, insect societies have evolved sophisticated disease defenc...
Abstract Workers in social insects perform different roles, and the environment they experience diff...