Abstract

All known fungus-growing ants (tribe Attini) are obligately symbiotic with their cultivated fungi. The fungal cultivars of “lower” attine ants are facultative symbionts, capable of living apart from ants, whereas the fungal cultivars of “higher” attine ants, including leaf-cutting genera Atta and Acromyrmex, are highly specialized, obligate symbionts. Since higher attine ants and fungi are derived from lower attine ants and fungi, understanding the evolutionary transition from lower to higher attine agriculture requires understanding the historical sequence of change in both ants and fungi. The biology of the poorly known ant genus Mycetagroicus is of special interest in this regard because it occupies a phylogenetic position intermediate between lower and higher ant agriculture. Here, based on the excavations of four nests in Pará, Brazil, we report the first biological data for the recently described species Mycetagroicus inflatus, including the first descriptions of Mycetagroicus males and larvae. Like M. cerradensis, the only other species in the genus for which nesting biology is known, the garden chambers of M. inflatus are unusually deep and the garden is most likely relocated vertically in rainy and dry seasons. Due to the proximity of nests to the Araguaia River, it is likely that even the uppermost chambers and nest entrances of M. inflatus are submerged during the rainy season. Most remarkably, all three examined colonies of M. inflatus cultivate the same fungal species as their congener, M. cerradensis, over 1,000 km away, raising the possibility of long-term symbiont fidelity spanning speciation events within the genus.

Highlights

  • The ant genus Mycetagroicus, described in 2001, is a member of the ant tribe Attini, all of which are obligate agriculturalists and fungivores

  • Understanding the biology of Mycetagroicus is our best hope for reconstructing the attributes of the most recent common ancestor that it shares with the higher Attini, especially when considered in combination with the biology of the most closely related outgroup [currently thought to be the Cyphomyrmex wheeleri clade (Schultz and Brady, 2008)]

  • Reconstructing the common ancestor of Mycetagroicus ? the higher Attini is important for reconstructing the evolutionary transitions that occurred on the branch subtending the higher Attini, arguably the most ecologically significant period of evolutionary change in all of the Attini

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Summary

Introduction

The ant genus Mycetagroicus, described in 2001, is a member of the ant tribe Attini, all of which are obligate agriculturalists and fungivores. In establishing the genus, Brandao and Mayhe-Nunes (2001) included three species: M. cerradensis, M. triangularis, and M. urbanus. In 2008, the same authors described a fourth species, M. inflatus, based on two workers collected by R. Rosa da Silva in southern Para, Brazil, in 2005 (Brandao and MayheNunes, 2008). The descriptions of three of the four Mycetagroicus species were based solely on workers. For M. triangularis, a single specimen of the gyne was described. Mycetagroicus males and larvae have remained entirely unknown

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