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Title: Partner fidelity and environmental filtering preserve stage‐specific turtle ant gut symbioses for over 40 million years
Abstract

Sustaining beneficial gut symbioses presents a major challenge for animals, including holometabolous insects. Social insects may meet such challenges through partner fidelity, aided by behavioral symbiont transfer and transgenerational inheritance through colony founders. We address such potential through colony‐wide explorations across 13 eusocial, holometabolous insect species in the ant genusCephalotes. Through amplicon sequencing, we show that previously characterized worker microbiomes are conserved in soldier castes, that adult microbiomes exhibit trends of phylosymbiosis, and thatCephalotescospeciate with their most abundant adult‐enriched symbiont. We find, also, that winged queens harbor worker‐like microbiomes prior to colony founding, suggesting vertical inheritance as a means of partner fidelity. Whereas some adult‐abundant symbionts colonize larvae, larval gut microbiomes are uniquely characterized by environmental bacteria from the Enterobacteriales, Lactobacillales, and Actinobacteria. Distributions acrossCephaloteslarvae suggest more than 40 million years of conserved environmental filtering and, thus, a second sustaining mechanism behind an ancient, developmentally partitioned symbiosis.

 
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NSF-PAR ID:
10389770
Author(s) / Creator(s):
 ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  
Publisher / Repository:
Wiley Blackwell (John Wiley & Sons)
Date Published:
Journal Name:
Ecological Monographs
Volume:
93
Issue:
1
ISSN:
0012-9615
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
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