Wednesday, 22 May 2013


Destroying your body, controlling your mind

So imagine you’re a fly, you’re out and about doing fly things when you decide you’re a bit hungry so you stop by your favourite flower and have something to eat, you realise it tastes a bit different  but think nothing of cause you’re a fly, you don’t really think to start with. After a while you start to feel something strange and start to do things that as a fly you wouldn't normally do, then one day Bang! A hypha burst out your head and you die. You've just become a victim of an ENTOMOPATHOGENIC FUNGI!


(Cordyceps Fungus Infected Flesh Fly)

Entomopathogenic Fungi have been doing this for as long as there have been insects to infect, they come in many different forms and effect there hosts in different ways. A typical entomopathogenic fungi will slowly grow inside there host while consuming them, typically it is to the benefit of the fungi to keep the host alive for as long as possible so it can get enough resources from its host to reproduce successfully.  When the fungi is ready to reproduce it will manipulate its host to optimise its dispersal and survival ranging from killing it where it stands to changing its behaviour to find new host or increasing its range of dispersal.

Once infected an insect will change its behaviour ether as a defence against the fungus or due to the fungus taking control.

Some of these behaviours are:
  
BEHAVIORAL FEVER
Behavioural fever is the insect’s way of delaying the funguses growth or stopping it altogether. This is achieved by seeking out locations of higher temperature and increasing the internal temperature of the insect. This behavioural response has been seen in multiple species of insects including Musca domestica and locust and grasshopper species, and when these species has raised there temperatures they were more likely to live long enough to reproduce before succumbing to the fungi

FEEDING BEHAVIOR
In most case insect will reduces the amount of food they consume as they get closer to death, this is caused by the chemicals released by the fungi but in earlier stages of infection the feeding rate will normally not drop as the fungi wants the insect to consume as much as possible for its own benefit.  In some cases an infected insect will start to move away from the normal feeding site of the insect, this can be a result of the fungi driving the insect to places for better dispersal but in other case it is thought to be because the insect is trying to reduce the rate of infection to closely related insects by insuring that it is some distance away from its offspring or other close relatives before it dies and the fungus starts to produce spores  

REPRODUCTIVE BEHAVIOR
As expected the fungi will lower the reproductive rates of an insect weather it is because the fungi is reducing the amount of energy the insect can invest in reproduction or because of the effects of secondary metabolites that effect the growth and development of eggs and nymphs. In the case of M. domestica , when a female has died the fungus can release pheromones that attract males to mate with female that will then go on to mate with other females and spread the fungal spores to more flies.    
 
(Entomophthora muscae, anthomyiid)
SOCIAL BEHAVIOR
Eusocial insects typically live in environment that favour the growth of fungal pathogens, so when a entomopathogenic fungi is detected with in a colony the insects increase in there grooming habits to remove spores from there body and will also remove infected from their nest or bury the dead to control the spread of the infection but when all this fails they will abandon their nest and create one where the fungus is not present.

So as I have shown with these examples the behaviour of an infected insect will change after infection ether for its own benefit or because it has been driven to do so by the fungus and these responses can have a large effect on the host or fungus survival and fitness.
So next time you feel the need to lie in the sun with little appetite and no energy you better hope you don’t get a sudden erg to climb because thing are not going to end well for you, but then again you’re probably not an insect so you should be fine…….     

Roy, H. E., Steinkraus, D. C., Eilenberg, J., Hajek, A. E., & Pell, J. K. (2006). Bizarre interactions and endgames: Entomopathogenic fungi and their arthropod hosts. In Annual Review of Entomology (Vol. 51, pp. 331-357).

3 comments:

  1. This blows my mind! (Kind of like the fly's!) Have there been any examples if fungi becoming invasive through this method? I guess I kind of rhetorically ask, what are the implications of this in the bigger picture?! Or has it been happening so long we don't even notice and it has no effect on human lives? I mean, what if an invasive parasite did this to an insect for dispersal? I'm not sure we could stop it!

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  2. I remember the first time I came across the New Zealand endemic example of this, the 'vegetable caterpillar', I was both horrified and fascinated. I still am. If insects watched horror movies, this would be their crime thriller. You set the mood well.

    Would you be able to put captions underneath the pictures? I would really like to know what species you've shown.

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  3. Cool article! I like the idea of the eusocial insects burial! Could this possibilly be utilised as a bio control agent for certain pest's? I ask this quite generally, as these sort of interactions probably take I long time to evolve. Also the fungi may also cause some undesirable side effects!

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