TY - JOUR
T1 - The independent origin of a queen number bottleneck that promotes cooperation in the African swarm-founding wasp, Polybioides tabidus
AU - Henshaw, M. T.
AU - Strassmann, J. E.
AU - Queller, D. C.
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgements We gratefully acknowledge Rashid Aman, the director of Research at the Kenyan National Museum, for his invaluable assistance in acquiring the necessary permission to collect in Kenya; Wilberforce Okeka, the head guide at the Kakamega Forrest Reserve, for his assistance in the field, and Pat and Jerry Henshaw, missionaries with Grace Ministries International, for logistical support while in Kenya. We also thank undergraduate students Tom Platt, who helped with the dissections, and Wendy Castle, who helped in the genetics laboratory. This work was supported by NSF grant DEB-9510126, IBN-9808809, and IBN-9975351 to Joan Strassmann and David Queller, by an NSF predoctoral fellowship to Mike Henshaw, and by a Wray-Todd fellowship from Rice University to Mike Henshaw.
PY - 2000
Y1 - 2000
N2 - When cooperation is based on shared genetic interests, as in most social insect colonies, mechanisms which increase the genetic similarity of group members may help to maintain sociality. Such mechanisms can be especially important in colonies with many queens because within-colony relatedness drops quickly as queen number increases. Using microsatellite markers, we examined the Old World, multiple-queen, swarm-founding wasp Polybioides tabidus which belongs to the ropalidiine tribe, and found that relatedness among the workers was four times higher than what would be expected based on queen number alone. Relatedness was elevated by a pattern of queen production known as cyclical oligogyny, under which, queen number varies, and daughter queens are produced only after the number of old queens has reduced to one or a very few. As a result, the queens are highly related, often as full sisters, elevating relatedness among their progeny, the workers. This pattern of queen production is driven by collective worker control of the sex ratios. Workers are three times more highly related to females than to males in colonies with a single queen while they are more equally related to males and females in colonies with more queens. As a result of this difference, workers will prefer to produce new queens in colonies with a single queen and males in colonies with many queens. Cyclical oligogyny has also evolved independently in another group of swarm-founding wasps, the Neotropical epiponine wasps, suggesting that collective worker control of sex ratios is widespread in polistine wasps.
AB - When cooperation is based on shared genetic interests, as in most social insect colonies, mechanisms which increase the genetic similarity of group members may help to maintain sociality. Such mechanisms can be especially important in colonies with many queens because within-colony relatedness drops quickly as queen number increases. Using microsatellite markers, we examined the Old World, multiple-queen, swarm-founding wasp Polybioides tabidus which belongs to the ropalidiine tribe, and found that relatedness among the workers was four times higher than what would be expected based on queen number alone. Relatedness was elevated by a pattern of queen production known as cyclical oligogyny, under which, queen number varies, and daughter queens are produced only after the number of old queens has reduced to one or a very few. As a result, the queens are highly related, often as full sisters, elevating relatedness among their progeny, the workers. This pattern of queen production is driven by collective worker control of the sex ratios. Workers are three times more highly related to females than to males in colonies with a single queen while they are more equally related to males and females in colonies with more queens. As a result of this difference, workers will prefer to produce new queens in colonies with a single queen and males in colonies with many queens. Cyclical oligogyny has also evolved independently in another group of swarm-founding wasps, the Neotropical epiponine wasps, suggesting that collective worker control of sex ratios is widespread in polistine wasps.
KW - Altruism
KW - Conflicts of interest
KW - Microsatellite
KW - Ropalidiini
KW - Split sex ratios
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/0033652363
U2 - 10.1007/s002650000264
DO - 10.1007/s002650000264
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0033652363
SN - 0340-5443
VL - 48
SP - 478
EP - 483
JO - Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology
JF - Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology
IS - 6
ER -