| Literature DB >> 26900202 |
Ana Duarte1, Sheena C Cotter2, Catherine E Reavey3, Richard J S Ward1, Ornela De Gasperin1, Rebecca M Kilner1.
Abstract
Social immunity refers to any immune defence that benefits others, besides the individual that mounts the response. Since contributions to social immunity are known to be personally costly, they are contributions to a public good. However, individuals vary in their contributions to this public good and it is unclear why. Here we investigate whether they are responding to contributions made by others with experiments on burying beetle (Nicrophorus vespilloides) families. In this species, females, males and larvae each contribute to social immunity through the application of antimicrobial exudates upon the carrion breeding resource. We show experimentally that mothers reduce their contributions to social immunity when raising large broods, and test two contrasting hypotheses to explain why. Either mothers are treating social immunity as a public good, investing less in social immunity when their offspring collectively contribute more, or mothers are trading off investment in social immunity with investment in parental care. Overall, our experiments yield no evidence to support the existence of a trade-off between social immunity and other parental care traits: we found no evidence of a trade-off in terms of time allocated to each activity, nor did the relationship between social immunity and brood size change with female condition. Instead, and consistent with predictions from models of public goods games, we found that higher quality mothers contributed more to social immunity. Therefore our results suggest that mothers are playing a public goods game with their offspring to determine their personal contribution to the defence of the carrion breeding resource.Entities:
Keywords: Antibacterial; Game theory; Insect; Lysozyme; Social evolution; Trade-off
Year: 2015 PMID: 26900202 PMCID: PMC4750363 DOI: 10.1007/s10682-015-9806-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evol Ecol ISSN: 0269-7653 Impact factor: 2.717
The predicted results from each experiment for either the trade-off or public goods hypotheses
| Experiments | Predictions | Results | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Trade-off hypothesis | Public goods hypothesis | ||
| 1. Relationship between brood size and brood lytic activity | No effect of brood size | No effect or positive correlation between brood size and brood lytic activity | No effect of brood size |
| 2. Manipulation of brood size followed by behavioural observations | Increased time spent provisioning larger broods reduces time spent maintaining carcass | No trade-off | No trade-off |
| 3. Manipulation of brood size and female condition, followed by measurement of female lytic activity | Rearing large broods causes reduction in maternal lytic activity | Rearing large broods causes reduction in maternal lytic activity | Rearing large broods causes reduction in maternal lytic activity |
| Female condition affects slope/elevation of trade-off | Females in better condition show higher lytic activity | Female condition (in hours of care received as larvae) does not significantly affect lytic activity; but larger females show higher lytic activity | |
| Negative correlation between lytic activity of female’s exudates prior to hatching and brood mass at hatching | No such correlation | Positive correlation between lytic activity prior to hatching and brood mass at hatching | |
LM with log-transformed larval lytic activity as response variable
| Estimate | SE |
|
|
| |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (Intercept) | 0.10 | 0.46 | 74 | 0.21 | 0.83 |
| Day | −0.55 | 0.12 | 74 | −4.67 |
|
| Number of larvae | −0.01 | 0.01 | 74 | −1.18 | 0.24 |
Significant effects (p value < 0.05) are shown in bold
Fig. 1a Log lytic activity (in mg/ml lysozyme equivalents) of females one day after hatching. Females received either large (20 larvae, N = 14) or small (5 larvae, N = 16) broods. b Log average larval mass of small and large broods. In both plots filled circles show predicted means and standard errors of the minimal adequate model (white circles = 0 h females, black circles = 24 h females). Open circles are raw data. Data points from each treatment have been offset for clarity of the figure
LM with log-transformed female lytic activity 1 day after hatching as response variable, when brood size was experimentally manipulated
| Estimate | SE |
|
|
| |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (Intercept) | −7.61 | 2.41 | 27 | −3.16 |
|
| Brood (small) | 0.69 | 0.35 | 27 | 1.98 | 0.058 |
| Female size | 1.22 | 0.48 | 27 | 2.25 |
|
Significant effects (p value < 0.05) are shown in bold
Fig. 2Scatterplot of log lytic activity in female exudates prior to hatching (48 h) against log lytic activity 1 day after hatching (96 h)