Cuticular antifungals in spiders: density- and condition dependence.

Animals living in groups face a high risk of disease contagion. In many arthropod species, cuticular antimicrobials constitute the first protective barrier that prevents infections. Here we report that group-living spiders produce cuticular chemicals which inhibit fungal growth. Given that cuticular...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Daniel González-Tokman, Jasmin Ruch, Tamara Pulpitel, Fleur Ponton
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3956717?pdf=render
id doaj-7bc63fa1fcd04a8fb1e1d499cf6bed3d
record_format Article
spelling doaj-7bc63fa1fcd04a8fb1e1d499cf6bed3d2020-11-25T01:01:27ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0193e9178510.1371/journal.pone.0091785Cuticular antifungals in spiders: density- and condition dependence.Daniel González-TokmanJasmin RuchTamara PulpitelFleur PontonAnimals living in groups face a high risk of disease contagion. In many arthropod species, cuticular antimicrobials constitute the first protective barrier that prevents infections. Here we report that group-living spiders produce cuticular chemicals which inhibit fungal growth. Given that cuticular antifungals may be costly to produce, we explored whether they can be modulated according to the risk of contagion (i.e. under high densities). For this purpose, we quantified cuticular antifungal activity in the subsocial crab spider Diaea ergandros in both natural nests and experimentally manipulated nests of varying density. We quantified the body-condition of spiders to test whether antifungal activity is condition dependent, as well as the effect of spider density on body-condition. We predicted cuticular antifungal activity to increase and body-condition to decrease with high spider densities, and that antifungal activity would be inversely related to body-condition. Contrary to our predictions, antifungal activity was neither density- nor condition-dependent. However, body-condition decreased with density in natural nests, but increased in experimental nests. We suggest that pathogen pressure is so important in nature that it maintains high levels of cuticular antifungal activity in spiders, impacting negatively on individual energetic condition. Future studies should identify the chemical structure of the isolated antifungal compounds in order to understand the physiological basis of a trade-off between disease prevention and energetic condition caused by group living, and its consequences in the evolution of sociality in spiders.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3956717?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Daniel González-Tokman
Jasmin Ruch
Tamara Pulpitel
Fleur Ponton
spellingShingle Daniel González-Tokman
Jasmin Ruch
Tamara Pulpitel
Fleur Ponton
Cuticular antifungals in spiders: density- and condition dependence.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Daniel González-Tokman
Jasmin Ruch
Tamara Pulpitel
Fleur Ponton
author_sort Daniel González-Tokman
title Cuticular antifungals in spiders: density- and condition dependence.
title_short Cuticular antifungals in spiders: density- and condition dependence.
title_full Cuticular antifungals in spiders: density- and condition dependence.
title_fullStr Cuticular antifungals in spiders: density- and condition dependence.
title_full_unstemmed Cuticular antifungals in spiders: density- and condition dependence.
title_sort cuticular antifungals in spiders: density- and condition dependence.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Animals living in groups face a high risk of disease contagion. In many arthropod species, cuticular antimicrobials constitute the first protective barrier that prevents infections. Here we report that group-living spiders produce cuticular chemicals which inhibit fungal growth. Given that cuticular antifungals may be costly to produce, we explored whether they can be modulated according to the risk of contagion (i.e. under high densities). For this purpose, we quantified cuticular antifungal activity in the subsocial crab spider Diaea ergandros in both natural nests and experimentally manipulated nests of varying density. We quantified the body-condition of spiders to test whether antifungal activity is condition dependent, as well as the effect of spider density on body-condition. We predicted cuticular antifungal activity to increase and body-condition to decrease with high spider densities, and that antifungal activity would be inversely related to body-condition. Contrary to our predictions, antifungal activity was neither density- nor condition-dependent. However, body-condition decreased with density in natural nests, but increased in experimental nests. We suggest that pathogen pressure is so important in nature that it maintains high levels of cuticular antifungal activity in spiders, impacting negatively on individual energetic condition. Future studies should identify the chemical structure of the isolated antifungal compounds in order to understand the physiological basis of a trade-off between disease prevention and energetic condition caused by group living, and its consequences in the evolution of sociality in spiders.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3956717?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT danielgonzaleztokman cuticularantifungalsinspidersdensityandconditiondependence
AT jasminruch cuticularantifungalsinspidersdensityandconditiondependence
AT tamarapulpitel cuticularantifungalsinspidersdensityandconditiondependence
AT fleurponton cuticularantifungalsinspidersdensityandconditiondependence
_version_ 1725209442060861440