Zoology/Evolutionary Biology, University of Regensburg, Universitätsstrasse 31, 93053 Regensburg, Germany.
Institute for Biology, University of Graz, Universitätsplatz 2, 8010 Graz, Austria.
Proc Biol Sci. 2023 Feb 8;290(1992):20221784. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2022.1784.
Social insect queens and workers can engage in conflict over reproductive allocation when they have different fitness optima. Here, we show that queens have control over queen-worker caste allocation in the ant , a species in which workers lack reproductive organs. We describe crystalline deposits that distinguish castes from the egg stage onwards, providing the first report of a discrete trait that can be used to identify ant caste throughout pre-imaginal development. The comparison of queen and worker-destined eggs and larvae revealed size and weight differences in late development, but no discernible differences in traits that may be used in social interactions, including hair morphology and cuticular odours. In line with a lack of caste-specific traits, adult workers treated developing queens and workers indiscriminately. Together with previous studies demonstrating queen control over sex allocation, these results show that queens control reproductive allocation in and suggest that the fitness interests of colony members are aligned to optimize resource allocation in this ant.
当社会昆虫的蚁后和工蚁具有不同的适应度最优值时,它们可能会在生殖分配上发生冲突。在这里,我们表明,在一种工蚁没有生殖器官的蚂蚁中,蚁后可以控制蚁后的工蚁等级分配。我们描述了从卵期开始就可以区分等级的晶体沉积物,这是首次报道可以用于在整个幼虫发育阶段识别蚂蚁等级的离散特征。对蚁后和工蚁注定的卵和幼虫的比较表明,在后期发育过程中存在大小和重量的差异,但在可能用于社会互动的特征上没有明显差异,包括毛发形态和表皮气味。与缺乏特定等级的特征一致,成年工蚁对正在发育的蚁后和工蚁不加区分地进行处理。这些结果与先前表明蚁后控制着性别分配的研究结果一致,表明蚁后控制着蚂蚁的生殖分配,并表明蚁群成员的适应度利益是一致的,以优化这种蚂蚁的资源分配。