Snake scent gland secretions repel and induce contact toxicity in ants
Paul J. Weldon, Robert K. Vander Meer

TL;DR
Snake scent glands produce secretions that repel and harm ants, suggesting an evolutionary adaptation to deter ant predation.
Contribution
This study demonstrates that snake scent gland secretions act as ant repellents and contact toxins, offering new insight into snake-ant interactions.
Findings
Ants avoided snake scent gland secretions in repellency assays, showing rapid antennation and retreat.
Direct application of secretions caused paralysis and death in ants, indicating contact toxicity.
Responses were observed across multiple ant species and snake families, suggesting a widespread deterrent function.
Abstract
Embedded in the tail base of all snakes is a pair of scent glands from which typically foul-smelling secretions are expelled when snakes are disturbed. The tendency of predatory ants to avoid snake cloacal fluids, and the abundance and structural diversity of potentially insecticidal carboxylic acids identified in scent gland secretions (SGS), prompted speculation that SGS function to deter ants. We examined the deterrent properties of the SGS of the Middle American burrowing python (Loxocemus bicolor) in fumigation, repellency, and contact-toxicity behavioral assays against workers of the red imported fire ant (Solenopsis invicta) and a species of carpenter ant (Camponotus floridanus), thus representing the two major ant sub-families, Myrmicinae and Formicinae, respectively. We also examined responses by S. invicta to the SGS of representative booid, pythonid, colubrine, elapinine, and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInsect and Arachnid Ecology and Behavior · Animal Behavior and Reproduction · Plant and animal studies
