Host age determines parasite load of Laboulbeniales fungi infecting ants: Implications for host-parasite relationship and fungal life history

Publication date: Available online 3 January 2018 Source:Mycoscience Author(s): Ferenc Báthori, Walter P. Pfliegler, Zoltán Rádai, András Tartally Arthropod-parasitic fungi of the order Laboulbeniales are known to exhibit specialization to individual host taxa in most cases. Some species exhibit ecological specificity to multiple, often unrelated hosts in certain microhabitats; and often position specificity to different host body parts. The myrmecophilous Rickia wasmannii (Ascomycota: Laboulbeniales) infects Myrmica species (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) (host specificity), and occasionally other arthropod inquilines inside the ant nest (ecological specificity). An effect of the position of infection on the thallus densities has also been reported. Another determinative factor that may also exist in the Rickia-Myrmica host-parasite system, the chronological age of ant worker hosts, has also been linked to parasite load. Comprehensive studies on the age-related infection intensity, however, are still lacking. Here we investigated whether the level of infection correlates with the age of the M. scabrinodis host consistently. We found that older hosts exhibited higher parasite load, even though the infection level of the different colonies varied widely. The results highlight that the level of R. wasmannii infections are strongly influenced by host individual and host colony factors.
Source: Mycoscience - Category: Biology Source Type: research