Edited by Brad Harbison
Researchers
at North Carolina State University have for the first time identified a
specific chemical used by the higher termite castes -- the queens and
the kings — to communicate their royal status with worker termites. The
findings could advance knowledge of termite evolution, behavior and
control.
A study published in Proceedings of
the National Academy of Sciences shows that a wax-like hydrocarbon — a
chemical consisting of only carbon and hydrogen atoms called heneicosane
-- on the body surface of subterranean royal termites is used to enable
worker termites to recognize and care for them. Termites live mostly
underground or in wood and are generally blind, necessitating the use of
chemical signals to communicate.
"This is the
first report of a queen recognition pheromone in termites and the first
report of a king recognition pheromone in insects," said Coby Schal,
Blanton J. Whitmire Distinguished Professor of Entomology at NC State.
Schal
and NC State Ph.D. graduate Colin Funaro, the paper's co-corresponding
authors, used gas chromatography to isolate specific chemicals from the
exoskeletons of royal and worker Reticulitermes flavipes termites and
found heneicosane on the royal termites, but not on workers.
When
heneicosane was placed on glass dummies serving as royal termite
proxies, workers did not bow or curtsy, but instead started shaking --
an action that seemed to reflect the termite version of royal
recognition. Workers shook even more when the royal pheromone was
blended with other hydrocarbons from the colony's workers that represent
the colony's odor.
"Termites use a two-step
recognition process — the colony's odor gives workers a 'home' context
and heneicosane within this context denotes 'royals are in the home,'"
Schal said.
"The royal-recognition pheromone
lets workers know that there is a queen or a king present and that
everything is stable in the colony," Funaro said. "Worker termites shook
more when realizing that the royals were also nest mates."
Schal
said that the study upends the commonly held belief that queens of the
insect order Hymenoptera - ants, bees and wasps - were the first to use
these wax-like hydrocarbon pheromones for royal recognition.
"Termites
appeared some 150 million years ago while the social Hymenoptera
appeared about 100 million years ago, so this discovery of a hydrocarbon
as a royal-recognition pheromone in termites appears to predate its use
in social insects," Schal said.
R. flavipes termites
are major pests in North Carolina and the Southeast, causing billions
in damage, Schal added. In recent years they have spread to the west
coast of the U.S., and into Canada, South America, Europe, and Asia.
Ed
Vargo of Texas A&M University (formerly a professor at NC State)
and Katalin Boroczky of Penn State University (formerly a postdoctoral
researcher at NC State) also co-authored the paper.
Funding for the work came NC State's Blanton J. Whitmire endowment.
Source: Eureka Press Release