The Pattern of Social Parasitism in Maculinea teleius Butterfly Is Driven by the Size and Spatial Distribution of the Host Ant Nests

Insects. 2023 Feb 12;14(2):180. doi: 10.3390/insects14020180.

Abstract

The parasitic relationship between Maculinea butterflies and Myrmica ants has been extensively studied but little information is available on the spatial occurrence of Maculinea larvae. We searched for the presence of Maculinea teleius in 211 ant nests at two sites in two crucial phases of its life cycle, i.e., in autumn, during the initial larval development, and in the following late spring, before pupation. We assessed variations in the proportion of infested nests and factors correlated with spatial distributions of parasites in Myrmica colonies. The parasitism rate in autumn was very high (∼50% of infestation rate) but decreased in the following spring. The most important factor explaining parasite occurrence in both seasons was the nest size. Further factors, such as the presence of other parasites, the Myrmica species or the site, concurred to explain the differential survival of Ma. teleius until the final development. Irrespective of the host nest distribution, the parasite distribution changed from even in autumn to clumped in late spring. Our work showed that the survival of Ma. teleius is correlated with colony features but also with the nest spatial distribution, which therefore should be taken into consideration in conservation strategies aiming at preserving these endangered species.

Keywords: Maculinea; Microdon myrmicae; ant colony size; host specificity; join count statistics; multiparasitism; myrmecophily; spatial association.

Grants and funding

This research was funded within the project CLIMIT (Climate Change Impacts on Insects and their Mitigation) funded by DLR-BMBF (Germany), NERC and DEFRA (UK), ANR (France), Formas (Sweden), and Swedish EPA (Sweden) through the FP6 BiodivERsA Eranet, as well as by the project “A multitaxa approach to study the impact of climate change on the biodiversity of Italian ecosystems” of the Italian Ministry of Education, University and Research (MIUR). MW was funded by Polish National Science Centre (NCN) grant 2018/31/B/NZ8/03476.