ants and Communicable-Diseases

ants has been researched along with Communicable-Diseases* in 3 studies

Other Studies

3 other study(ies) available for ants and Communicable-Diseases

ArticleYear
How disease constrains the evolution of social systems.
    Proceedings. Biological sciences, 2020, 08-12, Volume: 287, Issue:1932

    Animal populations are occasionally shocked by epidemics of contagious diseases. The ability of social systems to withstand epidemic shocks and mitigate disruptions could shape the evolution of complex animal societies. We present a mathematical model to explore the potential impact of disease on the evolutionary fitness of different organizational strategies for populations of social species whose survival depends on collaborative efficiency. We show that infectious diseases select for a specific feature in the organization of collaborative roles-cohort stability-and that this feature is costly, and therefore unlikely to be maintained in environments where infection risks are absent. Our study provides evidence for an often-stated (but rarely supported) claim that pathogens have been the dominant force shaping the complexity of division of labour in eusocial societies of honeybees and termites and establishes a general theoretical approach for assessing evolutionary constraints on social organization from disease risk in other collaborative taxa.

    Topics: Animals; Ants; Bees; Behavior, Animal; Biological Evolution; Communicable Diseases; Isoptera; Social Behavior

2020
[Lice, fleas, ticks and ants: non-venomous apterous arthropods].
    Medecine tropicale : revue du Corps de sante colonial, 1996, Volume: 56, Issue:3

    Topics: Animals; Ants; Bites and Stings; Communicable Diseases; Humans; Insect Control; Patient Education as Topic; Phthiraptera; Siphonaptera; Ticks; Travel

1996
[The histopathology of parasitic infestation in certain of the ants].
    Zeitschrift fur Parasitenkunde (Berlin, Germany), 1952, Volume: 15, Issue:4

    Topics: Animals; Ants; Communicable Diseases; Humans; Parasitic Diseases

1952