Rueppell Olav, Johnson Nels, Rychtár Jan
Department of Biology, University of North Carolina, Greensboro, 312 Eberhart Building, Greensboro, NC 27403, USA.
Biol Lett. 2008 Jun 23;4(3):270-3. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2008.0065.
Female mating frequency is one of the key parameters of social insect evolution. Several hypotheses have been suggested to explain multiple mating and considerable empirical research has led to conflicting results. Building on several earlier analyses, we present a simple general model that links the number of queen matings to variance in colony performance and this variance to average colony fitness. The model predicts selection for multiple mating if the average colony succeeds in a focal task, and selection for single mating if the average colony fails, irrespective of the proximate mechanism that links genetic diversity to colony fitness. Empirical support comes from interspecific comparisons, e.g. between the bee genera Apis and Bombus, and from data on several ant species, but more comprehensive empirical tests are needed.
雌性交配频率是群居昆虫进化的关键参数之一。人们提出了几种假说来解释多次交配现象,大量实证研究得出了相互矛盾的结果。在早期的一些分析基础上,我们提出了一个简单的通用模型,该模型将蚁后交配次数与蚁群表现的方差联系起来,并将这种方差与蚁群平均适合度联系起来。该模型预测,如果平均而言蚁群在一项核心任务中取得成功,就会选择多次交配;如果平均而言蚁群失败,则会选择单次交配,而不考虑将遗传多样性与蚁群适合度联系起来的直接机制。实证支持来自种间比较,例如蜜蜂属(Apis)和熊蜂属(Bombus)之间的比较,以及几种蚂蚁物种的数据,但仍需要更全面的实证检验。