Participating laboratories

Below are the laboratories participating in the INSECTS network, with brief descriptions of the research interests and expertise of the laboratory.

CopenhagenFirenzeKeeleLausanne
OuluRegensburgSheffieldZurich
HelsinkiLeuvenWürzburg

KU-sealUniversity of Copenhagen, Denmark

Principal Network project:

Challenges to and synergisms in advanced societies involving symbionts

Prof. Jacobus J. (Koos) Boomsma
(coordinator)

Institute of Biology
Department of Population Biology
University of Copenhagen
Universitetsparken 15
DK-2100 Copenhagen Ø
Denmark

Tel: +45 353 21340

Fax: +45 353 21250

e-mail:
JJBoomsma@bi.ku.dk

Koos Boomsma's home page

Copenhagen web site

Current postdoc:
Sophie Armitage

Previous postdocs:
Seirian Sumner
Sylvia Cremer

Fungus growing (attine) ants have acquired an unusually effective symbiosis with fungi (which they rear in underground gardens) but are also plagued by unusual challenges of specialised parasites, exploiting the ants themselves, their fungal crops, or the interaction between them. The program will concentrate on how socially parasitic Acromyrmex species exploit existing colonies of closely related host species, how their mating and breeding system has become simplified and how their small workers (who do not forage) cut down on costly glandular defences against infections by fungal pathogens attacking the ants themselves or their gardens. Collaborations with Firenze, Keele, Sheffield and Zürich are planned for this program. A detailed analysis of Wolbachia bacterial symbionts in Acromyrmex , which are known to disrupt reproduction in many other insects , is planned together with subcontractor Leuven.

Research expertise:

Ant parasites and diseases
Interaction of ants with symbionts
Fungus-growing ants.
Maculinea parasites of Myrmica ants.
Causes and consequences of queen multiple-mating.


frnz_logoUniversity of Firenze, Italy

Principal Network project:

Chemical information, social disruption and investment in defence

Prof. Stefano Turrillazzi

Dipartimento di Biologia Animale e Genetica
Università di Firenze
Via Romana 17
Firenze
I-50125
Italy

Tel: +39 (0)552288218

Fax: +39 (0)55 222565

E-mail:
turillazzi@mail.unifi.it

Firenze web site

Current postdoc:
Pascal Theodora

Previous postdoc:
Thibaud Monin

This program will use temperate and tropical wasps as model systems. These are societies characterised by less advanced social organisation, but highly effective defence. It will analyse how social parasites evade the normally effective chemical recognition system of the wasp societies that they usurp (collaborations with Keele and Copenhagen possible). It will also analyse the distribution of high molecular weight components in the venom produced across basal and derived genera of wasps. The stinging defence behaviour of wasps causes severe allergies and regular casualties around the world. This part of the work may involve collaboration with Sheffield and Keele and with the Italian Company ANALLERGO SrL, which produces commercial antiallergenics to wasp stings

Research expertise:

Social parasites of wasps.
Behavioural ecology of polistine and stenogastrine wasps.
Nestmate recognition mechanisms.


keellogoUniversity of Keele, U.K.

Principal Network project:

Information content of organic molecules and their significance for social cohesion

Dr. Graeme Jones
Prof. David Morgan

Chemical Ecology Group
Lennard-Jones Laboratories
School of Chemistry and Physics
Keele University
Staffordshire ST5 5BG
United Kingdom

Tel: +44 (0)1782 584173

Fax: +44 (0)1782 712378

E-mail:
G.R.Jones@keele.ac.uk
E.D.Morgan@chem.keele.ac.uk

Keele web site

Current postdoc:
Falko Drijfhout

Previous postdoc:
Jutta Tentschert

The Keele group is concerned with insect chemical information technology:
  • Which molecules are important for recognition?
  • To what extent can insects discriminate between molecules of like structure?
  • What depth of information can be communicated using molecules?

In collaboration with Firenze we are trying to find new ways of answering these questions. We are currently building a library of synthetic compounds which are regularly found on insect cuticle and investigating new methods of applying compounds to the cuticle of live insects. In addition to becoming involved in these projects the appointed postdoc will have an important role as a provider of chemical analyses to the other Participants, both by doing analyses for them and by hosting and training secondment visitors. It is expected that many other groups will (as in the previous TMR network) collaborate with the Keele postdoc on chemical "information technology" questions involving various model systems

Research expertise:

Chemical analysis using GC-MS.
Chemical synthesis of cuticular compounds.
Chemical recognition.


lausanneUniversity of Lausanne, Switzerland

Principal Network project:

Synergistic effects of increasing colony size in advanced social systems

Prof. Laurent Keller

University of Lausanne
Institute of Ecology
Batiment de Biologie
1015 Lausanne
Switzerland

Tel: +41 (0)21 692473

Fax: +41 (0)21 6924105

E-mail:
Laurent.Keller@ie-zea.unil.ch

Laurent Keller's home page

Lausanne web site

Current postdoc:
Rob Hammond

Several lineages of ants have species that can monopolise entire habitats because they have given up the family structure and overt aggression between families that normally typifies insect societies. The main projects involving the Lausanne postdoc will be to:
  1. determine the relationship between colony size and the efficiency of ant colonies.
  2. investigate the genetic and ecological factors that promote and favour the maintenance of unicolonial colony structure (i.e., species where colonies are not distinct and where individuals within the same nest are only very distantly related).

The program will concentrate on ecological, chemical and genetic aspects of this problem using Formica and Solenopsis ants as empirical model systems. Collaboration with Oulu/Helsinki and Keele will be an integrated part of this program.

Research expertise:

Kin conflicts in animal societies.
Population genetics of ants.
Sex ratio studies in ants and fig wasps.
Genetic studies of mechanisms of ageing.
Genetic basis of behaviour.


olouUniversity of Oulu, Finland

Principal Network project:

The genetic underpinning of social organisation in advanced social systems

Prof. Pekka Pamilo

Department of Biology
Box 3000
FIN-90014 University of Oulu
Finland

Tel: +358 8 553 1780

Fax: +358 8 5531799

E-mail:
pekka.pamilo@oulu.fi

Current postdoc:
David Hughes

Previous postdoc:
Marianne Elias
Max Reuter

Together with the subcontractor in Helsinki, this program exploits the well known field populations of Formica ants in Finland, on which groups in Copenhagen, Lausanne and Sheffield have also published influential papers together with the Helsinki group. The questions addressed are complementary to those in the Lausanne program, and focus on:
  1. Challenges due to internal conflicts and the role of chemicals in mediating or preventing the expression of such conflicts.
  2. The role of family structure for host-pathogen dynamics and colonisation patterns of both hosts and parasites, especially comparing populations with different social organisation.
  3. Analyses of the genetics underlying the production of informative communication substances used for kin recognition.

Collaborations with Copenhagen and Keele are foreseen.

Research expertise:

Classical genetics of male-haploid organisms.
Population genetic analysis.
Molecular evolution.


regensburgUniversity of Regensburg, Germany

Principal Network project:

Synergistic effects of increasing colony size in primitive social systems

Prof. Jürgen Heinze

Lehrstuhl fuer Biologie I
Universitaet Regensburg
Universitaetsstrasse 31
D-93040 Regensburg
Germany

Tel.: +49 941 943 3056

Fax: +49 941 943 3304

E-mail:
juergen.heinze@biologie.uni-regensburg.de

Jürgen Heinze's home page

Regensburg web site

Current postdoc:
Patrizia D'Ettorre

Ponerine ants of the genus Pachycondyla allow the comparative study of key social traits in closely related species which differ greatly in colony size and the reproductive potential of individuals within societies (this also holds for the attine ants and social wasps studies in Copenhagen, Firenze and Sheffield, but in the latter the comparisons are across genera). The expression of reproductive conflict and the chemical signatures of social rank are expected to differ as a function of colony size. Evolutionary theory makes precise predictions as to how reproductive competition among co-breeding individuals should be solved and Pachycondyla is ideal to test these by a combination of behavioural, genetic and chemical studies. Collaborations with Sheffield, Firenze and the Würzburg subcontractor are expected.

Research expertise:

Ant life histories.
Reproductive physiology in ants.
Large scale laboratory culture of ants.


sheffieldUniversity of Sheffield, U.K.

Principal Network project:

Meeting the organisational demands of advanced decentralised societies

Prof. Francis Ratnieks

Laboratory of Apiculture & Social Insects
Department of Animal & Plant Sciences
Sheffield University
Western Bank,
Sheffield S10 2TN
United Kingdom

Tel: +44 (0)114 222 0070

Fax: +44 (0)114 222 0002

E-mail:
F.Ratnieks@sheffield.ac.uk

Francis Ratniek's home page

Sheffield web site

Current postdoc:
Adam Tofilski

Previous postdoc:
Tom Wenseleers

This program will investigate the use of information in insect societies. There will be two main themes:
  1. The use of information in regulating foraging systems in societies of different sizes and with different methods of foraging (on foot versus flying, with or without pheromone trails).
  2. The use of information in the manipulation of reproduction by individuals and in the prevention of manipulation by individuals.

The work will use modelling, experiments, cuticular hydrocarbon analysis and DNA microsatellite analysis and will concentrate on honey bees, ponerine ants and fungus growing ants. Collaborations with Copenhagen, Keele, Oulu and Regensburg are envisaged. Conceptually, this program is similar to the one in Regensburg, but makes comparisons across major taxa of social insects.

Research expertise:

Honey bee biology and apiaries.
Mathematical modelling.
Task partitioning studies.


ethlogoETH Zürich, Switzerland

Principal Network project:

Challenges to and synergisms in primitive social systems

Prof. Paul Schmid-Hempel

ETH Zurich
Experimental Ecology
ETH-Zentrum, NW
CH-8092 Zurich
Switzerland

Tel: +41 (0)1 633 6048

Fax: +41 (0)1 632 1271

E-mail:
psh@env.ethz.ch

Paul Schmid-Hempel's home page

Zürich web site

Previous postdoc:
Eamonn Mallon

Life cycles of bumble bee colonies are extremely short, lasting just a few months. The prevalence, social disruption and debilitating effects of diseases are generally more variable and evident than in long lived societies such as honey bees or Acromyrmex ants. The evolutionary ecology of defence mechanisms and how they vary, also in comparison with long-lived honey bees or ants, will be investigated. Bumblebees have seldom developed multiple queen mating, which is known to provide fitness benefits in a parasite-rich environment. Is this because of a conflict between the sexes where males prevent females from mating multiply by chemical mechanisms? The program will concentrate on this type of questions in collaboration with Copenhagen and Keele.

Research expertise:

Ecology and evolution of parasites and diseases in social insects.
Epidemiology.
Bumble bees.


Subcontracting laboratories offering specialist expertise:
01ylioenpmsUniversity of Helsinki, Finland

Research expertise:

Long term field studies of Formica ants.
Ultimate and proximate factors of importance for the resolution of reproductive conflicts.

Prof. Lotta Sundström

Department of Ecology and Systematics
P.O. Box 17
FIN-00014 Helsinki
Finland

Tel: +358 (0)9 1917595

Fax: +358 (0)9 1917492

E-mail:
liselotte.sundstrom@helsinki.fi

Lotta Sundström's home page

Helsinki web site


kullogoCatholic University of Leuven, Belgium

Research expertise:

Morphology.
Ultrastructure.
Exocrine glands.
Wolbachia and other bacterial symbionts and parasites.
High resolution microscopy.

Prof. Johan Billen

Zoological Institute K.U.Leuven
Naamsestraat 59
B-3000 Leuven
Belgium

Tel: +32 (0)16 323975

Fax: +32 (0)16 324575

E-mail:
Johan.Billen@bio.kuleuven.ac.be

Leuven web site


wulogoUniversity of Würzburg, Germany

Research expertise:

Vibration and chemical communication mechanisms in ants.
Reproductive competition among ant males.
Energetics of foraging in leaf cutter ants and bees.
Reproductive conflict and sociogenetic organization of ant colonies.
Nestmate recognition, territoriality and intercolonial communication in ants.

Prof. Bert Hölldobler

Biozentrum der Universität Würzburg
Lehrstuhl für Verhaltensphysiologie
und Soziobiologie (Zoologie II)
Am Hubland
D-97074 Würzburg
Germany

Tel: +49 (0)931 8884308

Fax: +49 (0)931 8884309

E-mail:
bertholl@biozentrum.uni-wuerzburg.de

Bert Hölldobler's home page

Würzburg web site


CopenhagenFirenzeKeeleLausanne
OuluRegensburgSheffieldZurich
HelsinkiLeuvenWürzburg

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