HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

The Macrotermitinae, the fungus-growing termites, constitute a subfamily of the family
Termitidae Termitidae is the largest family of termites whose members are commonly known as the higher termites. They are evolutionarily the most specialised termite group, with their highly compartmentalized hindgut lacking the flagellated protozoans comm ...
that is only found within the Old World tropics. This subfamily consists of 14 genera and about 350
species In biology, a species is the basic unit of classification and a taxonomic rank of an organism, as well as a unit of biodiversity. A species is often defined as the largest group of organisms in which any two individuals of the appropriate s ...
and are distinguished by the fact that they cultivate fungi inside their nests to feed the members of the colony. Despite the popular reputation of termites for breaking down and digesting wood, most termite species do not possess the capability to digest the cellulose in wood. Macrotermitinae instead use their mounds to cultivate fungus in a symbiotic relationship, similar to
leaf-cutter ant Leafcutter ants, a non-generic name, are any of 47 species of leaf-chewing ants belonging to the two genera '' Atta'' and ''Acromyrmex''. These species of tropical, fungus-growing ants are all endemic to South and Central America, Mexico, and pa ...
s (fungus-cultivating ants). Worker termites find plant debris and macerate it, chewing and moistening the material. They excrete the resulting fecal pellets inside the mound. Other worker termites use this matter to construct fungal combs. The
mycelium Mycelium (plural mycelia) is a root-like structure of a fungus consisting of a mass of branching, thread-like hyphae. Fungal colonies composed of mycelium are found in and on soil and many other substrates. A typical single spore germinates ...
then spreads through the comb and digests the plant material into a form that makes for nutritious food for the colony. The mounds are kept humid as possible to encourage rapid fungal growth.


Colony structure

Macrotermitinae has a complex colony system. A mature Macrotermitinae colony consists of a royal pair, sterile caste, winged reproductive called "alates" and young ones. A royal pair are a king and queen which are the only ones capable of reproduction. The sterile caste is made up of workers (major workers and minor workers) and soldiers (major soldiers and minor soldiers). The royal pair produces workers, soldiers and alates (future royal pairs). The royal pair lives in the "royal chamber" where the queen continuously lays eggs when the king mates with her. Young ones are immature workers, soldier and alates. They live in the royal chamber after they hatch. Workers concentrate on colony process, for example collecting dead plant material, making fungal comb, brood care, taking care of young ones etc. Soldiers protect the colony.


Distribution

The Macrotermitinae subfamily has a widespread distribution through the
tropics The tropics are the regions of Earth surrounding the Equator. They are defined in latitude by the Tropic of Cancer in the Northern Hemisphere at N and the Tropic of Capricorn in the Southern Hemisphere at S. The tropics are also referr ...
of Africa, the Middle East, and southern and southeastern Asia, but it is not present in Australia or the
New World The term ''New World'' is often used to mean the majority of Earth's Western Hemisphere, specifically the Americas."America." ''The Oxford Companion to the English Language'' (). McArthur, Tom, ed., 1992. New York: Oxford University Press, p. ...
. Fossil evidence from Tanzania show that the Macrotermitinae developed agriculture about 31 million years ago.


Ecology

Like other termites, Macrotermitinae are soil engineers, mixing their salivary secretions with soil particles to make their strong, hard mounds and galleries. Their mounds are some of the largest built by any species of termite, with volumes of thousands of litres and lasting for many decades. They are probably the most complex mound colonies of any insect group. There are 11 accepted genera in the Macrotermitinae and about 330 species, with the greatest diversity being in Africa. About 40 species of '' Termitomyces'' have been identified as symbionts. In contrast to the
fungus-growing ants Fungus-growing ants (tribe Attini) comprise all the known fungus-growing ant species participating in ant–fungus mutualism. They are known for cutting grasses and leaves, carrying them to their colonies' nests, and using them to grow fungus o ...
in the tribe ''Attini'', the ''Termitomyces'' often bear fruiting bodies which produce spores, and it is believed that transmission of the fungus to other termites is mainly by horizontal transmission (sibling to sibling) rather than by vertical transmission (mother to daughter). Some species are an exception to this, and in all five species of the genus '' Microtermes'' tested, the symbiont fungi did not bear sexual fruiting bodies, and transmission was through the maternal route. Another exception was the single species ''
Macrotermes bellicosus ''Macrotermes bellicosus'' is a species of ''Macrotermes''. It is the largest termite known, with queens measuring about long, workers about and soldiers are slightly larger. ' means "combative" in Latin. The species is a member of a genus indi ...
'' where again the fungus did not fruit, and where transmission was paternal. They have a rather rigid caste system, with little flexibility after the early instar stage. They also exhibit complex behavioural activities and their presence in an arid or semi-arid area can be dominant over other termite species. As compared to other higher termites however, they show some primitive features and have failed to evolve soil consumption. The mound contains galleries and chambers in which the termites grow fungi as
endosymbiont An ''endosymbiont'' or ''endobiont'' is any organism that lives within the body or cells of another organism most often, though not always, in a mutualistic relationship. (The term endosymbiosis is from the Greek: ἔνδον ''endon'' "within ...
s. The fungi concerned are species of '' Termitomyces''; it is unclear whether one species of termite is always associated with one species of fungus, and it is probable that several species of termite may utilise a single fungal species. The worker termites bring plant material such as dried grass, decaying wood and
leaf litter Plant litter (also leaf litter, tree litter, soil litter, litterfall or duff) is dead plant material (such as leaves, bark, needles, twigs, and cladodes) that have fallen to the ground. This detritus or dead organic material and its constituent ...
, back to the mound. This material is chewed up and semi-digested by the termites, fertilised with their faeces and placed in the chambers where it is quickly colonised by the fungus to form a "fungus comb". The termites cultivate these fungus gardens, adding more substrate as required, and removing the older parts of the comb for consumption by all members of the colony. In addition, some species feed on various types of living and dead plant material including wood, but not on decomposing vegetation; these termites have a similar microbial gut flora to other species of termite.


Life cycle

''Macrotermitinae'' like most eusocial insects primarily reproduce through a mass-swarming event known as a nuptial flight, of which the releasing of mature winged sexuals (''alates)'' is coordinated with neighboring colonies and triggered by seasonal rainfalls. The nuptial flights of most species are nocturnal in nature although some are crepuscular or diurnal. Shortly after a nuptial flight, the alates quickly remove their wings and set off to form heterosexual pairs, which consists of the male (king) and female (queen) individuals respectively. The fully claustral royal pairs rapidly sequester themselves within the clay rich sandy soils of their environment and form a ''copularium'', also known as a claustral chamber. The pairs mate and soon eggs are laid over a couple days, which can take anywhere from 2 - 4 weeks to hatch into several dozen nymphs that can take anywhere between 1 - 3 months to mature into the first workers and soldiers. Symbiont life cycle ''Horizontal transmission '' Around the time of the maturity and emergence of the first foraging workers, the appearance of fruiting bodies or mushrooms can be observed sprouting from the mounds of mature ''Macrotermitinae colonies'', typically between 1/2 - 3 months after nuptial flights. The mushrooms release sexual spores (basidiospores) which are wind dispersed into the environment. The nanitic workers while foraging pick up these spores incidentally as they feed on
lignocellulose Lignocellulose refers to plant dry matter (biomass), so called lignocellulosic biomass. It is the most abundantly available raw material on the Earth for the production of biofuels. It is composed of two kinds of carbohydrate polymers, cellulose a ...
detritus; broadly consisting of decaying leaf, wood and grass debris laden with spores all of which is ingested, partially digested, and formed into round pellets known as mylospheres, which are then molded into the primordial fungus comb. The spores of the specific Termitomyces species survive the passage through the gut of their termite host, and begin to germinate into homokaryonic hyphae which rapidly colonize the new fungus comb. The resulting homokaryonic hyphae then fuse with unrelated homokaryons of the same species in a process called
plasmogamy Plasmogamy is a stage in the sexual reproduction of fungi, in which the protoplasm of two parent cells (usually from the mycelia) fuse without the fusion of nuclei, effectively bringing two haploid nuclei close together in the same cell. This sta ...
, resulting in a heterokaryon with multiple genetically distinguished nuclei. Due to this method of sexual reproduction, a mixed culture of many different genotypes may therefore exist within the fungus gardens of young Macrotermitinae colonies. In contrast, mature colonies are known to only have one singularly cloned Termitomyces strain. A monoculture likely arises in a colony through positive-frequency dependent selection, in which a genotype outcompetes others via preference by the termites for the most vigorously productive and prolific strain. As the fungus grows, nutrient rich macrostructures known as mycotêtes, otherwise known as "nodules" or sporodochium, begin to grow on the comb which is what the termites primarily eat. The mycotêtes contain substructures known as conidiophores that form asexual spores (conidia) that are used to asexually propagate the fungus in the colony. The fungus genotype that exhibits the highest production of mycotêtes is typically preferred by the termites, resulting in the high expression of that strain which overtime leads to the emergence of a monoculture in the colony. Similar looking but different structures known as primordia also form and are precursors to the sexual fruiting bodies of Termitomyces, although their growth is normally suppressed by the consumption of the primordia by the termites. In most ''Macrotermitinae'', the above described is how their Termitomyces symbiont is propagated generation-to-generation. Few known exceptions exist, the most prominent being
Macrotermes bellicosus ''Macrotermes bellicosus'' is a species of ''Macrotermes''. It is the largest termite known, with queens measuring about long, workers about and soldiers are slightly larger. ' means "combative" in Latin. The species is a member of a genus indi ...
of the genus
Macrotermes ''Macrotermes'' is a genus of termites belonging to the subfamily Macrotermitinae and widely distributed throughout Africa and South-East Asia. Well-studied species include ''Macrotermes natalensis'' and '' M. bellicosus.'' Like other genera i ...
and species belonging to the genus Microtermes. In the case of the exceptions, the symbiont is vertically transmitted, in which the royal termite pair are the ones to carry and propagate the fungus every new generation and in which the fungus is always asexually propagated via parent-to-offspring with no sexual reproduction of the symbiont.


Relationship with cockroaches

This subfamily began cultivating the ancestor of ''Termitomyces'' fungi approximately 30 million years ago. Several studies indicate that Macrotermitinae gut microbiota is similar to that of cockroaches. This gut microbiota-based evidence is strongly supported by an
amber Amber is fossilized tree resin that has been appreciated for its color and natural beauty since Neolithic times. Much valued from antiquity to the present as a gemstone, amber is made into a variety of decorative objects."Amber" (2004). In ...
sample containing an ancestral species of both termites and cockroaches. A researcher believes that Macrotermitinae is the last formed termite groups because of their complex colony life style; for example, the overlapping caste system and age-dependent polyethism. Moreover, the gut microbiota of Macrotermitinae is composed of bacteria rather than flagellates.


Genera

* '' Acanthotermes'' * '' Allodontermes'' * '' Ancistrotermes'' * '' Euscaiotermes'' * '' Hypotermes'' * ''
Macrotermes ''Macrotermes'' is a genus of termites belonging to the subfamily Macrotermitinae and widely distributed throughout Africa and South-East Asia. Well-studied species include ''Macrotermes natalensis'' and '' M. bellicosus.'' Like other genera i ...
'' * '' Megaprotermes'' * '' Microtermes'' * '' Odontotermes'' * '' Parahypotermes'' * '' Protermes'' * '' Pseudacanthotermes'' * '' Sphaerotermes'' * '' Synacanthotermes''


Gallery

File:TermiteMound.jpg, A Macrotermitinae mound in the Okavango Delta just outside
Maun, Botswana Maun is the fifth-largest town in Botswana. As of 2011, it had a population of 55,784. Maun is the "tourism capital" of Botswana and the administrative centre of Ngamiland district. Francistown and Maun are linked by the A3 highway. It is also the ...
File:Macro Termite Soldier.jpg, A termite soldier (Macrotermitinae) in the Okavango Delta File:Matebele ant+termite.jpg, An ant of the genus ''Megaponera'' with a captured worker termite (Macrotermitinae) in the
Okavango Delta The Okavango Delta (or Okavango Grassland; formerly spelled "Okovango" or "Okovanggo") in Botswana is a swampy inland delta formed where the Okavango River reaches a tectonic trough at an altitude of 930–1,000 m in the central part of the en ...
, Botswana File:InsideTermiteMound.jpg, Worker termites (Macrotermitinae) closing a newly exposed shaft inside a termite mound to prevent the entry of predators


References

{{Taxonbar, from=Q10936976 Termites