Abstract

BackgroundCockroaches of the genus Attaphila regularly occur in leaf-cutting ant colonies. The ants farm a fungus that the cockroaches also appear to feed on. Cockroaches disperse between colonies horizontally (via foraging trails) and vertically (attached to queens on their mating flights). We analysed the chemical strategies used by the cockroaches to integrate into colonies of Atta colombica and Acromyrmex octospinosus. Analysing cockroaches from nests of two host species further allowed us to test the hypothesis that nestmate recognition is based on an asymmetric mechanism. Specifically, we test the U-present nestmate recognition model, which assumes that detection of undesirable cues (non-nestmate specific substances) leads to strong rejection of the cue-bearers, while absence of desirable cues (nestmate-specific substances) does not necessarily trigger aggression.ResultsWe found that nests of Atta and Acromyrmex contained cockroaches of two different and not yet described Attaphila species. The cockroaches share the cuticular chemical substances of their specific host species and copy their host nest’s colony-specific cuticular profile. Indeed, the cockroaches are accepted by nestmate but attacked by non-nestmate ant workers. Cockroaches from Acromyrmex colonies bear a lower concentration of cuticular substances and are less likely to be attacked by non-nestmate ants than cockroaches from Atta colonies.ConclusionsNest-specific recognition of Attaphila cockroaches by host workers in combination with nest-specific cuticular chemical profiles suggest that the cockroaches mimic their host’s recognition labels, either by synthesizing nest-specific substances or by substance transfer from ants. Our finding that the cockroach species with lower concentration of cuticular substances receives less aggression by both host species fully supports the U-present nestmate recognition model. Leaf-cutting ant nestmate recognition is thus asymmetric, responding more strongly to differences than to similarities.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12898-016-0089-5) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Cockroaches of the genus Attaphila regularly occur in leaf-cutting ant colonies

  • General observations Ant workers from the two species were of similar size (U-Test n = 33, p = 0.81; head width Atta n = 18, x = 1.69 mm, sd = 0.31 mm; Acromyrmex n = 15, x = 1.71 mm, sd = 0.37 mm)

  • Nymphs were smaller than adults (generalized linear model on the principal component (PC), p = 0.04), but the ant species whose colonies the cockroaches were collected from did not affect the PC values (p = 0.55, interaction age x species p = 0.94)

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Summary

Introduction

Cockroaches of the genus Attaphila regularly occur in leaf-cutting ant colonies. The ants farm a fungus that the cockroaches appear to feed on. Discriminators from colony A may perceive the odour dissimilarity as larger, and be more likely to treat B-individuals as non-nestmates, than vice versa. This effect is possible because odour differences do not appear to be measured by the ants by a simple equivalent of Euclidean distance. It has been proposed that discriminators only react aggressively to non-nestmate profiles when these contain substances that are novel to the discriminator ants or when a given substance is more concentrated in the opponent’s cuticular profile than in the discriminator’s own profile (u-present model, [5, 7]). Social insects are more sensitive to differences than to similarities

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