Deadly Fungus Turns Ants Into Zombies

Ellipse

The Living Force
FOTCM Member
DiscoveryNews
Thu Mar 3, 2011 12:22

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THE GIST

* Four new species of fungi that turn ants into zombies have been discovered in the Amazon.
* Ants become infected when they come into contact with spores released by the fungus. Within a week the ant enters a "zombie-like" state.
* The fungus then grows out of the head of the ant, releasing spores into the air.

Researchers combing the rainforests of Brazil have uncovered four new species of fungi that turns ants into zombies.

Although it is not the first time the fungi has been seen affecting ants, the discovery of four distinct species in close proximity highlights the level of biodiversity in the Amazon.

Their study appears online in the journal PLoS One.

The research, led by Assistant Professor David Hughes of the University of Pennsylvannia, identified and described the parasitic fungus Ophiocordyceps unliateralis living on four species of carpenter ant (Camponotini sp.) in the Zona da Mata region of Brazil.

Ants become infected when they come into contact with spores released by the fungus. Within a week the ant enters a "zombie-like" state.

"This so-called zombie or brain-manipulating fungus alters the behaviors of the ant host, causing it to die in an exposed position, typically clinging onto and biting the adaxial surface of shrub leaves," the study authors write.

The fungus then grows out of the head of the ant, releasing spores into the air, which rain down onto unsuspecting ants and the forest floor.

In 2009, Hughes led a team of researchers studying "zombie-ants" in Indonesia. They found the infected ants consistently attached to leaves 25 centimeters (9.8 inches) above the ground in an environment with 95 percent humidity -- perfect conditions for the fungus to grow.

In the current study, Hughes and colleagues found each species of fungus was different in size and shape, and adapted to live only in one particular species.

Two of the species of fungus have also adapted to grow secondary spores, doubling their chances of finding a new host.

Steve Shattuck, an entomologist with CSIRO Ecosystem Sciences says there are records of the fungus existing in Australia, but its range is limited to tropical regions of Australia.

"It's hard to find. Exactly how common it is, who knows? But obviously if it was too common it would kill all the ants and then go away," says Shattuck.

He says, while there are many examples of ants living in symbiotic relationships with other organisms such as bacteria and other types of fungi, none are as invasive as Ophiocordyceps.

And despite the fungus' ability at destroying a whole colony of ants, Shattuck says its potential for use in pest control is very limited.

"What the paper found was that the fungi were species specific," he says. "So unless one of ants was your pest it doesn't do you any good."

It also means the possibility that the fungi will turn our 2000-odd species of Australian ant into a zombie army is highly remote.

"It would be very unlikely," says Shattuck. "If the fungi did get here it wouldn't have anything to live on and would just die out in all likelihood."

According to Hughes' website, his team plan to study the zombie-inducing fungus in Colombia, Guyana, Brazil, Peru, Malaysia, Papua New Guinea and Australia.


http://news.discovery.com/animals/zombie-ants-fungus-amazon-110303.html
 
Photos: "Zombie" Ants Found With New Mind-Control Fungi

National Geographic
March 3, 2011

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A stalk of the newfound fungus species Ophiocordyceps camponoti-balzani, grows out of a "zombie" ant's head in a Brazilian rain forest.

Originally thought to be a single species, called Ophiocordyceps unilateralis, the fungus is actually four distinct species—all of which can "mind control" ants—scientists announced Wednesday.

The fungus species can infect an ant, take over its brain, and then kill the insect once it moves to a location ideal for the fungi to grow and spread their spores.

All four known fungi species live in Brazil's Atlantic rain forest, which is rapidly changing due to climate change and deforestation, said study leader David Hughes, an entomologist at Penn State University.

Hughes and colleagues made the discovery after noticing a wide diversity of fungal growths emerging from ant victims, according to the March 2 study in the journal PLoS ONE.

"It is tempting to speculate that each species of fungus has its own ant species that it is best adapted to attack," Hughes said.

"This potentially means thousands of zombie fungi in tropical forests across the globe await discovery," he said. "We need to ramp up sampling—especially given the perilous state of the environment."

—Matt Kaplan

zombie-fungus-infects-insects-mind-control-ant-infected_32848_600x450.jpg


More photos :
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2011/03/pictures/110303-zombie-ants-fungus-new-species-fungi-bugs-science-brazil/
 
As it so happened, I was just reading a post of domi (see here: http://cassiopaea.org/forum/index.php?topic=49.msg119391#msg119391) which stated the following among other things:

domi said:
Another good Keel quote from the last chapter of DOTG:

We are like ants, trying to view reality with very limited
perceptive equipment and then basing our theologies and
philosophies on what are essentially misperceptions. The real
problem is that there is a much larger reality around us that
we can not see but can only sense. While we grovel on our way
to the twenty-first century, someone or some thing is watching
with amusement. Like Columbus, we don't know where we've
been, where we've going or even where we are.

Added to the info in this topic, that quote of John Keel gives me shivers allround on the double...


Edit - Fixed quote tags
 

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