More eldritch ant horror!

cordyceps440.jpgIt's time to pay another visit to Cordyceps, the fungus that turns its hosts into spore-sprouting zombies.


The fungus, which can be found in many parts of the tropics, penetrates an insect's exoskeleton and then work its way into its host's body. At first the ant seems normal to the human eye, but eventually it makes its way to a leaf, where it clamps down with its mandibles. Cordyceps then sprouts out of the ant's body, lashing it to the leaf's underside, and producing a long stalk tipped with spores. The spores can then shower down on unfortunate insects below.


David Hughes of Penn State University has been publishing a string of fascinating papers in recent years about this science-fiction-topping parasite. In 2009, I wrote about one study of his on the exquisite precision of the fungus's manipulations. He and his colleagues found that one species that lives in Thailand almost always causes infected ants to clamp onto a leaf vein about 25 centimeters off the ground–a spot where the humidity and other conditions may be ideal for a fungus to grow. When Hughes and his colleagues moved infected ants higher up into the canopy, the fungus ...



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Published on May 09, 2011 10:40
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