Manipulated ants: inducing loyalty to sugar feeders with an alkaloid

Author:

Mogensen Anders Lander12ORCID,Andersen Laurits Bundgaard12,Sørensen Jesper Givskov1,Offenberg Joachim2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology Aarhus University Aarhus Denmark

2. Department of Ecoscience Aarhus University Aarhus Denmark

Abstract

AbstractBACKGROUNDWood ants are promising biocontrol agents in fruit plantations because they prey on pest insects and inhibit plant diseases. However, these ants also attend plant‐feeding homopterans to harvest their honeydew secretions, thereby increasing their numbers. This problem can be solved by offering ants alternative sugar sources that are more attractive than honeydew. From natural interactions, it is known that some species manipulate mutualistic partners toward loyalty by adding alkaloids to the food they offer their mutualists. Inspired by this, the addition of alkaloids might be used to make ants loyal to artificial sugar feeders and thus used to reduce populations of ant‐farmed homopterans in ant‐mediated biological control. We aimed to explore whether wood ants (Formica polyctena) would develop a taste preference for morphine‐containing sugar solutions in two‐choice laboratory tests.RESULTSAfter having fed on a morphine/sugar solution for 1 week, ants showed a significant preference for morphine solutions compared with equal concentration sugar solutions without morphine. Furthermore, ants lost this preference after 6–9 days on a morphine‐free diet.CONCLUSIONThe results show that wood ants react to morphine in their food, enabling chemical manipulation of their behavior, most likely through a taste preference. Thus, ants are susceptible to manipulation by mutualistic partners in natural interactions and furthermore may be manipulated artificially in biocontrol programs to avoid ant‐mediated build‐up of homopteran populations. © 2024 The Authors. Pest Management Science published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Society of Chemical Industry.

Funder

Green Development and Demonstration Program

Publisher

Wiley

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