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Ants corral, tranquilize aphids for "honeydew"
2007-10-15 00:58:03 Xinhua English

BEIJING, Oct. 15 (Xinhuanet) -- Scientists have long known that ants often set up housekeeping near and "corral" certain types of aphids because they produce a sugar-rich, sticky honeydew that is a staple of the ant diet.

They also bite off the wings of aphids to keep them from flying away, and ant glands produce chemicals that stunt the growth of aphids' wings.

But the new study showed that ants will also leave chemical traces when they walk to "tranquilize" the aphids and keep them from wandering off.

A team of British scientists used a digital camera and special software to measure the walking speed of aphids when they were placed on filter paper that had previously been walked over by ants to document this ant behavior. They found that the aphids moved much slower on the paper with the ant footprints than they did on plain paper.

Researchers also placed the aphids on dead leaves, which they instinctively walk off of in search of healthy leaves to eat, and found the presence of ants significantly slowed the aphids' travels, which could work to the ants' benefit.

"We believe that ants could use the tranquilizing chemicals in their footprints to maintain a populous ”„farm”¦ of aphids close to their colony, to provide honeydew on tap," said study leader Tom Oliver of the Imperial College London. "Ants have even been known to occasionally eat some of the aphids themselves, so subduing them in this way is obviously a great way to keep renewable honeydew and prey easily available."

The relationship may work out to the aphids' benefit in some ways though, Oliver points out.

"Ants have been documented attacking and fighting off ladybirds and other predators that have tried to eat their aphids," he said. "It's possible that the aphids are using this chemical footprint as a way of staying within the protection of the ants."

The research, detailed in the Oct. 10 issue of the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, shows that aphids are being "farmed" as a steady food source, which is more to their disadvantage, Oliver added.

"Although both parties benefit from the interaction, this research shows that all is not well in the world of aphids and ants," Oliver said. "The aphids are manipulated to their disadvantage: for aphids the ants are a dangerous liaison."

(Agencies)

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