期刊
ECOLOGY LETTERS
卷 7, 期 2, 页码 146-152出版社
WILEY
DOI: 10.1046/j.1461-0248.2003.00561.x
关键词
immunity; life history; parasite resistance; reproduction; social insect
类别
Parasites typically reduce host survival or fecundity. To minimize fitness loss, hosts can make temporal adjustments of their reproductive effort. To date such plastic shifts of life-history traits in response to parasitism are only known from solitary organisms where infected individuals can react by themselves. In the case of social insects, where brood care and reproductive effort is shared between reproductive individuals (typically the queen) and workers, adjustments of the reproductive effort would depend on collective decision-making. We tested for this possibility by experimentally activating the immune response of individual workers in colonies of the bumblebee, Bombus terrestris L. This induction resulted, in combination with environmental conditions, in a reduction of fitness of the social unity (i.e. colony success, measured by number and biomass of offspring) and a collective response towards earlier reproduction. As both phenomena are expressed at the level of the colony, the result suggests that key elements of the use of immune defence have been maintained through the evolutionary transition to sociality.
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