Ingram Krista K
Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138, USA.
Evolution. 2002 Oct;56(10):2008-16. doi: 10.1111/j.0014-3820.2002.tb00127.x.
In many polygynous social insect societies, ecological factors such as habitat saturation promote high queen numbers by increasing the cost of solitary breeding. If polygyny is associated with constrained environments, queen number in colonies of invasive social insects should increase as saturation of their new habitat increases. Here I describe the variation in queen number, nestmate relatedness, and nest size along a gradient of time since colonization in an invading population of Argentine ants (Linepithema humile) in Haleakala, Hawaii. Nest densities in this population increase with distance from the leading edge of the invasion, reaching a stable density plateau approximately 80 m from the edge (> 2 years after colonization). Although the number of queens per nest in Haleakala is generally lower than previously reported for Argentine ants, there is significant variation in queen number across this population. Both the observed and effective queen numbers increase across the density gradient, and nests in the center of the population contain queen numbers three to nine times higher than those on the edge of the invasion. The number of workers per nest is correlated with queen number, and nests in the center are six times larger than nests at the edge. Microsatellite analysis of relatedness among nestmates reveals that all nests in the Haleakala population are characterized by low relatedness and have evidence of multiple reproducing queens. Relatedness values are significantly lower in nests in the center of the population, indicating that the number of reproducing queens is greater in areas of high nest density. The variation in queen number and nestmate relatedness in this study is consistent with expectations based on changes in ecological constraints during the invasion of a new habitat, suggesting that the social structure of Argentine ant populations is strongly influenced by ecological factors. Flexibility in social structure may facilitate persistence in variable environments and may also confer significant advantages to a species when introduced into new areas.
在许多一夫多妻制的社会性昆虫群体中,诸如栖息地饱和等生态因素会通过增加独居繁殖的成本来促使蚁后数量增多。如果一夫多妻制与受限环境相关联,那么入侵性社会性昆虫群体中的蚁后数量应该会随着新栖息地饱和程度的增加而增加。在此,我描述了夏威夷哈雷阿卡拉地区入侵的阿根廷蚁(Linepithema humile)种群中,蚁后数量、巢伴亲缘关系以及巢穴大小随定居时间梯度的变化情况。该种群的巢穴密度随着与入侵前沿距离的增加而增大,在距离前沿约80米处(定居超过2年后)达到稳定的密度平台期。尽管哈雷阿卡拉地区每个巢穴中的蚁后数量通常低于先前报道的阿根廷蚁数量,但整个种群中蚁后数量存在显著差异。观察到的和有效的蚁后数量都随着密度梯度增加,种群中心的巢穴蚁后数量比入侵边缘的巢穴高出三到九倍。每个巢穴中的工蚁数量与蚁后数量相关,中心的巢穴比边缘的巢穴大六倍。对巢伴之间亲缘关系的微卫星分析表明,哈雷阿卡拉种群中的所有巢穴亲缘关系都较低,且有多个繁殖蚁后的证据。种群中心巢穴的亲缘关系值显著更低,表明在巢穴密度高的区域繁殖蚁后的数量更多。本研究中蚁后数量和巢伴亲缘关系的变化与基于新栖息地入侵过程中生态限制变化的预期一致,这表明阿根廷蚁种群的社会结构受到生态因素的强烈影响。社会结构的灵活性可能有助于在多变环境中持续存在,并且在引入新区域时也可能赋予物种显著优势。