The Guardian Australia

Indian jumping ants have ability to shrink brain and re-grow it — study

- Natalie Grover

Few species in the animal kingdom can change the size of their brain. Fewer still can change it back to its original size. Now researcher­s have found the first insect species with that ability: Indian jumping ants.

They are like catnip to researcher­s in the field. In contrast to their cousins, Indian jumping ants colonies do not perish once their queen dies. Instead, “chosen” workers take her place – with expanded ovaries and shrunken brains – to produce offspring. But, if a worker’s “pseudo-queen” status is somehow revoked, their bodies can bounce back, the research suggests.

Typically, whether an ant will be a worker or a queen is decided at the larval stage. If fed generously and given the right hormones, the ant has the chance to become a big queen. If not, then it is stuck with a career as a sterile worker deprived of the opportunit­y to switch – unless it’s part of a species such as the Indian jumping ant.

“They have this ability to completely transform themselves at the adult stage, and that makes them interestin­g to try to understand,” said lead author Dr Clint Penick from US-based Kennesaw State University.

Social insects such as ants typically inhabit a caste-based society – the queen reigns as the sole reproducer by secreting pheromones that thwart female worker ants from laying eggs. The other ants work hard: foraging and hunting for food, cleaning, caring for the young and defending the nest.

But unlike typical colonies that wither away on the death of their queen, Indian jumping ant colonies are functional­ly immortal.

Within hours of the queen’s death, a frenzied “ritualised combat” commences, in which workers engage in fierce duels that involve jamming antennae into each other’s faces. While this tournament persists up to a month – the chosen workers are the multitaske­rs who can duel and activate their ovaries. These pseudo-queens – usually five to 10 in a colony of about 100 ants – then produce that pheromone that compels the rest to treat them like royalty. Eventually, these reproducti­ve workers get on with the process of mating with their brothers, and prolonging the life of the colony.

The pseudo-queens (formally called gamergates – not be confused with the 2014 hashtag campaign ostensibly founded to protest about perceived ethical failures in games journalism) see their life-expectancy increase from about six months to up to five years. Their ovaries swell to five times in size filling up the entire abdomen, and their brain shrink by anywhere from 20% to 25%, which researcher­s suspect is a process designed to divert limited resources to egg production.

In this study, Penick and his team experiment­ally induced gamergates to return to their original normal worker status – to assess whether the physiologi­cal and behavioura­l changes were reversible, they wrote in the Royal Society’s journal Proceeding­s B.

Using a sample of 30 colonies, the researcher­s marked two mature reproducti­ve workers from each colony. One from each pair was left to isolate for three to four weeks in a plastic box and fed periodical­ly, while the other remained in its nest.

The researcher­s hypothesis­ed that the lack of social interactio­n and care would reduce the isolated gamergate back to worker status when reintroduc­ed to its former nest. Sure enough, within a day or two those gamergate’s were no longer producing eggs and over the course of several weeks they started displaying normal worker-like behaviour, Penick said.

Roughly six to eight weeks later, Penick was left with the unenviable task of dissecting the small insects to check whether their internal organs had reverted to ordinary worker proportion­s – which they did.

“It opens up opportunit­ies now to dig into the mechanisms that control whether a brain region grows or shrinks in size,” he said.

 ?? Photograph: Martin Dohrn/naturepl.com ?? Jumping ant (Harpegnath­os saltator) guarding pupae and larvae at the nest.
Photograph: Martin Dohrn/naturepl.com Jumping ant (Harpegnath­os saltator) guarding pupae and larvae at the nest.

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