Matte Arthur, LeBoeuf Adria C
Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 3EJ, United Kingdom.
Department of Biology, University of Fribourg, Fribourg CH-1700, Switzerland.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2025 Mar 4;122(9):e2413742122. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2413742122. Epub 2025 Feb 25.
Building differences between genetically equivalent units is a fundamental challenge for all multicellular organisms and superorganisms. In ants, reproductive or worker fate is typically determined during the larval stage, through feeding regimes managed by adult caretakers. However, the feeding care provided to larvae varies significantly across ants, as does phenotypic divergence between queen and worker castes. Here, we employed comparative phylogenetic methods and causal inference to investigate the relationships between larval feeding care, caste size dimorphism, and social complexity across ant diversity. We digitized the life's work of George and Jeanette Wheeler, cataloging the larval morphology of over 700 species, and we compiled data on species diets and larval feeding behaviors from the literature and our own observations. We measured queen-worker size dimorphism in 392 species and gathered data for colony size, worker polymorphism, and worker reproduction. Our analyses revealed that ancestral active-feeding larvae evolved passive morphologies when adults began feeding them individually, typically with processed material and often following a shift to nonpredatory diets. Greater queen-worker size dimorphism coevolved with larval passiveness, alongside traits indicative of increased social complexity, including larger colony sizes, worker subcastes, and a reduction in workers' reproductive potential. Likelihood comparisons of causal phylogenetic models support that extended alloparental care facilitated stronger caste dimorphism, which, in turn and along with increased colony sizes, promoted higher social complexity. Our results suggest that enhanced adult control over larval development enabled greater phenotypic specialization within colonies, with profound implications for social evolution.
在基因等同的个体之间构建差异,是所有多细胞生物和超个体面临的一项基本挑战。在蚂蚁中,生殖蚁或工蚁的命运通常在幼虫阶段就已确定,这一过程通过成年照料者控制的喂食方式来实现。然而,不同蚂蚁为幼虫提供的喂食照料差异显著,蚁后和工蚁等级之间的表型差异也是如此。在这里,我们运用比较系统发育方法和因果推断,来研究蚂蚁多样性中幼虫喂食照料、等级大小二态性和社会复杂性之间的关系。我们将乔治和珍妮特·惠勒一生的研究工作数字化,编录了700多个物种的幼虫形态,并从文献及我们自己的观察中收集了有关物种饮食和幼虫喂食行为的数据。我们测量了392个物种的蚁后 - 工蚁大小二态性,并收集了群体大小、工蚁多态性和工蚁繁殖的数据。我们的分析表明,当成年蚂蚁开始单独给幼虫喂食时,通常是用经过加工的食物,且往往伴随着向非捕食性饮食的转变,祖先具有主动觅食能力的幼虫就进化出了被动形态。更大的蚁后 - 工蚁大小二态性与幼虫的被动性共同进化,同时还伴随着表明社会复杂性增加的特征,包括更大的群体规模、工蚁亚等级以及工蚁繁殖潜力的降低。因果系统发育模型的似然性比较支持这样的观点,即延长的异亲照料促进了更强的等级二态性,而等级二态性反过来又与群体规模的增加一起,推动了更高的社会复杂性。我们的研究结果表明,成年蚂蚁对幼虫发育的控制增强,使得群体内部能够实现更大程度的表型特化,这对社会进化具有深远影响。