Social immunity in a tri-partite host-pathogen relationship

Strahodinsky F. 2025. Social immunity in a tri-partite host-pathogen relationship. Institute of Science and Technology Austria.

Download
OA Thesis_Florian_Strahodinsky_PDF.pdf 6.44 MB [Published Version]

Thesis | PhD | Published | English
Supervisor

Corresponding author has ISTA affiliation

Series Title
ISTA Thesis
Abstract
Ants are frequently challenged by different pathogens, which they counter with individual and collective responses. Usually, the pathogens like fungi or viruses are solitary and passive pathogens transmitted from host to host. Here, we use a nematobacterial pathogen complex to study worm-borne disease in black garden ants. These entomopathogenic nematodes are active parasites with an own behavior and chasing pray. In the first chapter, we investigated the basic biology of the host-pathogen relationship. We tested different ant life stages and found that adult ants display defense behaviors and are generally resistant to nematode infection, whereas brood is highly susceptible. In the case of worker pupae, we found a slight protective effect of the cocoon. When larvae are accompanied by adults, meaning a queen or a group of workers, survival is significantly enhanced. Moreover, we found that nematodes can transmit from infected cadavers to healthy worker larvae, confirming a transmissible disease in ants. Again, worker presence significantly reduces transmission risk. In the end, we were also able to disentangle the pathogen system and investigate the pathogenic effect of the bacterial and nematode components. In the second chapter, we studied the effect of multiple infections in adult queens and queen larvae. By multiple exposures in the mode of coinfection and superinfections, we wanted to assess the detrimental effect of combined fungal and nematode exposure to better understand how the pathogens interact with each other in an ant host. We found instances where combined exposure lead to higher mortality in a given time frame in both, adult queens and queen larvae. Overall entomopathogenic nematodes are a promising model to study worm infections in ants which extend our knowledge on collective disease defense.
Publishing Year
Date Published
2025-07-11
Publisher
Institute of Science and Technology Austria
Acknowledged SSUs
Page
138
ISSN
IST-REx-ID

Cite this

Strahodinsky F. Social immunity in a tri-partite host-pathogen relationship. 2025. doi:10.15479/AT-ISTA-19993
Strahodinsky, F. (2025). Social immunity in a tri-partite host-pathogen relationship. Institute of Science and Technology Austria. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT-ISTA-19993
Strahodinsky, Florian. “Social Immunity in a Tri-Partite Host-Pathogen Relationship.” Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2025. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT-ISTA-19993.
F. Strahodinsky, “Social immunity in a tri-partite host-pathogen relationship,” Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2025.
Strahodinsky F. 2025. Social immunity in a tri-partite host-pathogen relationship. Institute of Science and Technology Austria.
Strahodinsky, Florian. Social Immunity in a Tri-Partite Host-Pathogen Relationship. Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2025, doi:10.15479/AT-ISTA-19993.
All files available under the following license(s):
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0):
Main File(s)
Access Level
OA Open Access
Date Uploaded
2025-07-14
Embargo End Date
2026-01-15
MD5 Checksum
7164c21fe1946e839f7b8acd255ce803

Source File
Access Level
Restricted Closed Access
Date Uploaded
2025-07-14
MD5 Checksum
df3a02f0d937ea9a3d79d5fb94fff097

Export

Marked Publications

Open Data ISTA Research Explorer

Search this title in

Google Scholar