Extended disease resistance emerging from the faecal nest of a subterranean termite
台湾乳白蚁(Coptotermes formosanus)主要分布在中国南方地区,但是这种有侵略性和破坏性的小型咀嚼者已经在世界各地建立了聚居地,包括美国东南部和夏威夷。它们用被嚼烂的木材(曾经是台湾乳白蚁用来存放排泄物的地方)的混合物构建地下巢穴的内部结构。
Abstract
Social insects nesting in soil environments are in constant contact with entomopathogens but have evolved a range of defence mechanisms, resulting in both individual and social immunity that reduce the chance for epizootics in the colony, as in the case of subterranean termites.Coptotermes formosanus uses its faeces as building material for its nest structure that result into a ‘carton material’, and here, we report that the faecal nest supports the growth of Actinobacteria which provide another level of protection to the social group against entomopathogens. AStreptomyces species with in vivo antimicrobial activity against fungal entomopathogens was isolated from the nest material of multiple termite colonies. Termite groups were exposed to Metarhizium anisopliae, a fungal entomopathogen, during their foraging activity and the presence ofStreptomyces within the nest structure provided a significant survival benefit to the termites. Therefore, this report describes a non-nutritional exosymbiosis in a termite, in the form of a defensive mutualism which has emerged from the use of faecal material in the nesting structure ofCoptotermes. The association with an Actinobacteria community in the termite faecal material provides an extended disease resistance to the termite group as another level of defence, in addition to their individual and social immunity.