Journal
BIOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 19, Issue 11, Pages -Publisher
ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2023.0415
Keywords
compensatory feeding; Formica fusca; Beauveria bassiana; self-medication; adaptive plasticity
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Animals modulate their nutritional intake to combat pathogens. Formica fusca ants adjust their diet to include more aphid-supplemented foods when exposed to a fungal pathogen, reducing mortality. However, a varied diet is necessary for this benefit.
The modulation of nutritional intake by animals to combat pathogens is a behaviour that is receiving increasing attention. Ant studies using isolated compounds or nutrients in artificial diets have revealed a lot of the dynamics of the behaviour, but natural sources of medicine are yet to be confirmed. Here we explored whether Formica fusca ants exposed to a fungal pathogen can use an artificial diet containing foods spiked with different concentrations of crushed aphids for a medicinal benefit. We show that pathogen exposed colonies adjusted their diet to include more aphid supplemented foods during the acute phase of the infection, reducing the mortality caused by the disease. However, the benefit was only attained when having access to a varied diet, suggesting that while aphids contain nutrients or compounds beneficial against infection, it is a part of a complex nutritional system where costs and benefits of compounds and nutrients need to be moderated.
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