4.8 Article

The pupal moulting fluid has evolved social functions in ants

Journal

NATURE
Volume 612, Issue 7940, Pages 488-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-05480-9

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the NIH [R35GM127007]
  2. Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  3. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences of the NIH [UL1 TR001866]
  4. Gruss Lipper Post-Doctoral Research Fellowship
  5. Leon Levy Neuroscience Fellowship

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This study reveals the crucial role of ant pupae secretion in eliciting parental care and providing nutrition for early larvae. The secretion, analogous to mammalian milk, is essential for pupal survival and has implications for the evolution of ant eusociality.
Insect societies are tightly integrated, complex biological systems in which group-level properties arise from the interactions between individuals(1-4). However, these interactions have not been studied systematically and therefore remain incompletely known. Here, using a reverse engineering approach, we reveal that unlike solitary insects, ant pupae extrude a secretion derived from the moulting fluid that is rich in nutrients, hormones and neuroactive substances. This secretion elicits parental care behaviour and is rapidly removed and consumed by the adults. This behaviour is crucial for pupal survival; if the secretion is not removed, pupae develop fungal infections and die. Analogous to mammalian milk, the secretion is also an important source of early larval nutrition, and young larvae exhibit stunted growth and decreased survival without access to the fluid. We show that this derived social function of the moulting fluid generalizes across the ants. This secretion thus forms the basis of a central and hitherto overlooked interaction network in ant societies, and constitutes a rare example of how a conserved developmental process can be co-opted to provide the mechanistic basis of social interactions. These results implicate moulting fluids in having a major role in the evolution of ant eusociality.

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