Inoue Maki N, Ito Fuminori, Goka Koichi
Department of Applied Biological Science Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology 3-5-8 Saiwaicho Fuchu Tokyo 183-8509 Japan.
Faculty of Agriculture Kagawa University 2393 Ikenobe Miki Kagawa 761-0795 Japan.
Ecol Evol. 2015 Sep 2;5(18):4098-107. doi: 10.1002/ece3.1681. eCollection 2015 Sep.
Polygyny in social insects can greatly reduce within-nest genetic relatedness. In polygynous ant species, potential rival queens in colonies with multiple queens are often executed by other queens, workers, or both. The Argentine ant, Linepithema humile, native to South America, forms a "supercolony" that is composed of a large number of nests and is considered to contribute to the ant's invasion success. Currently, four mutually antagonistic supercolonies are contiguously distributed within a small area of Japan. Here, we analyzed the genetic structure and relatedness within and among the four supercolonies using microsatellite markers to clarify how L. humile maintains its supercoloniality. The results of AMOVA and BASP, the F ST values, and the existence of several private alleles indicated that the L. humile population in the Kobe area had a characteristic genetic structure. Within a given supercolony, there was significant genetic differentiation (F ST) among workers collected in May and those collected in September. The significant deviation from Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium increased, and the relatedness among workers significantly increased from May to September in all supercolonies. This result suggested that the supercolonies replaced old queens with new ones during the reproductive season, thus supporting the plausibility of queen execution. From the perspective of kin selection, workers collectively eliminate queens, thereby increasing their own inclusive fitness. Restricted gene flow among supercolonies, together with mating with sib and queen execution, could help to maintain the unique social structure of L. humile, the distribution of which is expanding worldwide.
社会性昆虫中的多雌制会极大地降低巢内的遗传相关性。在多雌制蚂蚁物种中,具有多个蚁后的蚁群中潜在的竞争蚁后通常会被其他蚁后、工蚁或两者共同处决。原产于南美洲的阿根廷蚁(Linepithema humile)形成了一个由大量巢穴组成的“超级蚁群”,被认为有助于该蚂蚁的入侵成功。目前,四个相互对抗的超级蚁群在日本的一个小区域内相邻分布。在这里,我们使用微卫星标记分析了这四个超级蚁群内部和之间的遗传结构及相关性,以阐明阿根廷蚁是如何维持其超级蚁群特性的。分子方差分析(AMOVA)和贝叶斯分析(BASP)的结果、F ST值以及几个私有等位基因的存在表明,神户地区的阿根廷蚁种群具有独特的遗传结构。在一个给定的超级蚁群中,5月采集的工蚁与9月采集的工蚁之间存在显著的遗传分化(F ST)。所有超级蚁群中,从5月到9月,哈迪-温伯格平衡的显著偏差增加,工蚁之间的相关性显著增加。这一结果表明,超级蚁群在繁殖季节用新蚁后替换了旧蚁后,从而支持了蚁后处决的合理性。从亲缘选择的角度来看,工蚁集体消灭蚁后,从而提高了它们自身的广义适合度。超级蚁群之间有限的基因流动,以及与近亲交配和蚁后处决,可能有助于维持阿根廷蚁独特的社会结构,其分布正在全球范围内扩大。