Evolution of cold-tolerant fungal symbionts permits winter fungiculture by leafcutter ants at the northern frontier of a tropical ant–fungus symbiosis
- aSection of Integrative Biology,
- bInstitute for Cellular and Molecular Biology, University of Texas, Austin, TX 78712;
- cOkinawa Institute of Science and Technology, Onna-son, Kunigami, Okinawa 904-2234, Japan;
- dDepartment of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Rice University, Houston, TX 77005; and
- eSchool of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287
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Edited by Nancy A. Moran, Yale University, West Haven CT, and approved January 26, 2011 (received for review October 20, 2010)

Abstract
The obligate mutualism between leafcutter ants and their Attamyces fungi originated 8 to 12 million years ago in the tropics, but extends today also into temperate regions in South and North America. The northernmost leafcutter ant Atta texana sustains fungiculture during winter temperatures that would harm the cold-sensitive Attamyces cultivars of tropical leafcutter ants. Cold-tolerance of Attamyces cultivars increases with winter harshness along a south-to-north temperature gradient across the range of A. texana, indicating selection for cold-tolerant Attamyces variants along the temperature cline. Ecological niche modeling corroborates winter temperature as a key range-limiting factor impeding northward expansion of A. texana. The northernmost A. texana populations are able to sustain fungiculture throughout winter because of their cold-adapted fungi and because of seasonal, vertical garden relocation (maintaining gardens deep in the ground in winter to protect them from extreme cold, then moving gardens to warmer, shallow depths in spring). Although the origin of leafcutter fungiculture was an evolutionary breakthrough that revolutionized the food niche of tropical fungus-growing ants, the original adaptations of this host-microbe symbiosis to tropical temperatures and the dependence on cold-sensitive fungal symbionts eventually constrained expansion into temperate habitats. Evolution of cold-tolerant fungi within the symbiosis relaxed constraints on winter fungiculture at the northern frontier of the leafcutter ant distribution, thereby expanding the ecological niche of an obligate host–microbe symbiosis.
Footnotes
Author contributions: U.G.M. designed research; U.G.M., A.S.M., E.H., R.S., D.L.W., S.E.S., H.D.I., M.C., J.L.M., and K.A.S. performed research; U.G.M., A.S.M., D.L.W., and T.E.J. contributed new reagents/analytic tools; U.G.M., A.S.M., R.S., D.L.W., S.E.S., H.D.I., M.C., and T.E.J. analyzed data; and U.G.M., A.S.M., R.S., D.L.W., and T.E.J. wrote the paper.
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
This article is a PNAS Direct Submission.
This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.1015806108/-/DCSupplemental.