TY - JOUR
T1 - The queen is not a pacemaker in the small-colony wasps Polistes instabilis and P. dominulus
AU - Jha, Shalene
AU - Casey-Ford, Rowan G.
AU - Pedersen, Jes S.
AU - Platt, Thomas G.
AU - Cervo, Rita
AU - Queller, David C.
AU - Strassmann, Joan E.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Jason Longoria for help observing P. dominulus colonies. We thank Stefano Turillazzi for facilitating this work and for helpful comments on the manuscript. We thank people of McAllen, Texas, for allowing us to videotape nests on their houses, and we thank ENEL, Italy, for letting us observe wasps in reforestation plots. Carlos Solís and Perttu Seppä kindly helped with videotaping and dissecting the wasps. Gösta Nachman gave valuable advice on the statistical analyses. We thank the social insects journal club in Copenhagen for comments on previous versions of this manuscript. This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under grant IBN98-8809 and the FW5 EU Research-training network INSECTS (contract HPRN-CT-2000-00052) and the Rice University Century Scholars program.
PY - 2006/5
Y1 - 2006/5
N2 - How work is organized varies in social insect colonies. Some investigators have argued that the queen plays an active role in regulating worker activity in species with small, simple colonies, but that work is self-organized in species with large, complex colonies. Here, we present data that suggest that two species of paper wasps do not fit this pattern. Polistes wasps are traditionally classified as primitively eusocial wasps, showing characteristics of simple insect societies, such as small colony sizes, lack of queen-worker dimorphism, and queen control of both reproduction and worker activity. Colony activity in Polistes is episodic; quiet periods are followed by periods of intense activity when most wasps in the colony are active. We tested whether queens in P. instabilis and P. dominulus controlled work by initiating active periods, goading workers into activity. Instead, we found that colony activity was initiated by the behaviours of workers arriving at the colony, walking across the nest face or, less commonly, antennating, leaving or gaster wagging. Queens initiated no more activity periods than the average worker. Furthermore, activity levels in colonies of P. dominulus in which the queen was removed did not differ significantly from activity levels in colonies with queens. Polistes instabilis and P. dominulus colonies showed characteristics of primitively eusocial insect societies, but also showed worker initiation of colony activity, suggesting that these two species represent examples of an intermediate level of colony organization in which queens control reproduction but do not control the organization of work.
AB - How work is organized varies in social insect colonies. Some investigators have argued that the queen plays an active role in regulating worker activity in species with small, simple colonies, but that work is self-organized in species with large, complex colonies. Here, we present data that suggest that two species of paper wasps do not fit this pattern. Polistes wasps are traditionally classified as primitively eusocial wasps, showing characteristics of simple insect societies, such as small colony sizes, lack of queen-worker dimorphism, and queen control of both reproduction and worker activity. Colony activity in Polistes is episodic; quiet periods are followed by periods of intense activity when most wasps in the colony are active. We tested whether queens in P. instabilis and P. dominulus controlled work by initiating active periods, goading workers into activity. Instead, we found that colony activity was initiated by the behaviours of workers arriving at the colony, walking across the nest face or, less commonly, antennating, leaving or gaster wagging. Queens initiated no more activity periods than the average worker. Furthermore, activity levels in colonies of P. dominulus in which the queen was removed did not differ significantly from activity levels in colonies with queens. Polistes instabilis and P. dominulus colonies showed characteristics of primitively eusocial insect societies, but also showed worker initiation of colony activity, suggesting that these two species represent examples of an intermediate level of colony organization in which queens control reproduction but do not control the organization of work.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/33646269044
U2 - 10.1016/j.anbehav.2005.11.005
DO - 10.1016/j.anbehav.2005.11.005
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:33646269044
SN - 0003-3472
VL - 71
SP - 1197
EP - 1203
JO - Animal Behaviour
JF - Animal Behaviour
IS - 5
ER -