TY - JOUR
T1 - The role of queens in colonies of the swarm-founding wasp Parachartergus colobopterus
AU - Herman, Rebecca A.
AU - Queller, David C.
AU - Strassmann, Joan E.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Juan Castilloa, Simonetta Holley de Castillo, Maria Antonietta Castillo Holley and Alicia Castillo Holley for facilitating access to our study areas and for hosting us in Venezuela. We thank the Universidad Central de Venezuela in Maracay for allowing us to work on their grounds. We thank Elisabeth Arévalo and Nicole Gerardo for help with dissections and Alice Green, Jessica Williams, Jenny Klingler, Gary Patterson and Kory Marchowski for behavioural observations. We thank Mike Henshaw, Giorgina Bernasconi and Bob Jeanne for helpful comments on the manuscript. Support for this study was provided by NSF Grants IBN 92-10051 and IBN 9507515.
PY - 2000
Y1 - 2000
N2 - Social insect queens reproduce while workers generally do not. Queens may also have other behavioural roles in the colony. In small, independent-founding colonies of social wasps, the dominant queen physically enforces her interests over those of the workers and serves as a pacemaker of the colony, stimulating workers to forage and engage in other tasks. By contrast, in large-colony, swarm-founding wasps, the collective interests of the workers are fulfilled in sex allocation and production of males, whether or not they coincide with the interests of the queens. The behavioural role of the queens in such species has not been extensively studied. We investigated the role of the queens both in regulating worker activity and in reducing the numbers of reproductively active queens in the swarm-founding epiponine wasp Parachartergus colobopterus. We found no evidence that queens regulate worker activity, as they were rarely involved in any interactions. Worker activity may be self-organized, without centralized active control by anyone. Furthermore, we found no evidence that the reduction in queen number characteristic of this tribe of wasps occurs in response to aggression among queens. The reduction in queen number may be a result of worker treatment of queens, although worker discrimination against some queens was not obvious in our data. (C) 2000 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour.
AB - Social insect queens reproduce while workers generally do not. Queens may also have other behavioural roles in the colony. In small, independent-founding colonies of social wasps, the dominant queen physically enforces her interests over those of the workers and serves as a pacemaker of the colony, stimulating workers to forage and engage in other tasks. By contrast, in large-colony, swarm-founding wasps, the collective interests of the workers are fulfilled in sex allocation and production of males, whether or not they coincide with the interests of the queens. The behavioural role of the queens in such species has not been extensively studied. We investigated the role of the queens both in regulating worker activity and in reducing the numbers of reproductively active queens in the swarm-founding epiponine wasp Parachartergus colobopterus. We found no evidence that queens regulate worker activity, as they were rarely involved in any interactions. Worker activity may be self-organized, without centralized active control by anyone. Furthermore, we found no evidence that the reduction in queen number characteristic of this tribe of wasps occurs in response to aggression among queens. The reduction in queen number may be a result of worker treatment of queens, although worker discrimination against some queens was not obvious in our data. (C) 2000 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/0033865114
U2 - 10.1006/anbe.1999.1385
DO - 10.1006/anbe.1999.1385
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0033865114
SN - 0003-3472
VL - 59
SP - 841
EP - 848
JO - Animal Behaviour
JF - Animal Behaviour
IS - 4
ER -