While humanity has spent the past two years suffering from the Covid-19 pandemic, in Texas a peculiar outbreak has been ravaging the tawny crazy ant. (Yes, that’s its real name.) Originally from South America, the invasive insect forms miles-wide supercolonies that flow like lava across the landscape, devouring not just insects but baby birds and lizards, muscling out native ant species in the process.

The tawny crazy ant’s success in Texas, though, has not gone unnoticed—microbially speaking. Ecologist Edward LeBrun, of the Brackenridge Field Laboratory at the University of Texas at Austin, and other scientists have been finding bloated crazy ants with bellies full of fatty tissue, a sure sign of infection by a fungus-like microsporidian parasite. Indeed, they discovered that this is a brand-new microsporidian species in a brand new genus (Myrmecomorba nylanderiae), a pathogen designed to ruin the day of crazy ants, yet one that seems to leave native species alone. The crazy ant’s sprawling supercolonies, it seems, are its undoing: With so many insects in close contact across the landscape, the microsporidian quickly spreads, in some cases wiping out populations. 

“We were looking at these populations out in nature and seeing that some of them were disappearing—collapsing and going to extinction—which was a big surprise,” says LeBrun. 

Going one step further, LeBrun and his colleagues collected infected crazy ants and released them near uninfected nests, then watched as the pathogen spread, collapsing the populations in less than two years. In a new paper in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the researchers described how the epidemic is ravaging an invasive species that has resisted all other methods of control like insecticides, and speculated that officials could use the microsporidian as a kind of biological weapon. 

A tawny crazy ant supercolony is made up of nests that share workers and food instead of competing with one another. Like our global human civilization, it’s all interconnected. “It’s sort of a bacterial plaque spreading on a petri dish,” says LeBrun of the way a supercolony creeps across a landscape.

Tawny crazy ants take down a spider

Photograph: Mark Sanders

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Anglo-Saxon burial containing 141 skeletons is unearthed by HS2 archaeologists in Buckinghamshire 

An Anglo-Saxon burial ground containing 141 individuals has been unearthed by archaeologists working…

I found simple iPhone hacks to INSTANTLY make it work faster again

EVERY smartphone gets a bit slow after a while and the iPhone…

Inside Nasa-backed Dream Chaser spaceplane hoping to beat Elon Musk at his game & change ‘how we connect Earth to space’

SIERRA Space has ramped up its rivalry with Space X this week…

You Can Clamp Your Phone Into Razer’s Fancy New Game Controller

Given everyone’s sustained interest in playing games on their phones, companies are…