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1 November 2005 REPRODUCTIVE CONFLICT IN SOCIAL INSECTS: MALE PRODUCTION BY WORKERS IN A SLAVE-MAKING ANT
Elisabeth Brunner, Andreas Trindl, Karl H. Falk, Juergen Heinze, Patrizia D'Ettorre
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Abstract

In insect societies, workers cooperate but may also pursue their individual interests, such as laying viable male eggs. The case of obligatory slave-making ants is of particular interest because workers do not engage in maintenance activities and foraging. Therefore, worker egg laying is expected to be less detrimental for colony efficiency than in related, nonparasitic species. Furthermore, as slave-making workers usually do not perform brood care and thus might have little power in manipulating sex allocation, they might be more strongly selected to increase their direct fitness by producing their own sons than workers in nonparasitic species. In this study we investigated worker reproduction in four natural colonies of the slave-making ant Polyergus rufescens, using highly variable microsatellite markers. Our results show that workers produce up to 100% of the males. This study thus presents the first direct evidence of an almost complete takeover of male reproduction by workers in ants.

Elisabeth Brunner, Andreas Trindl, Karl H. Falk, Juergen Heinze, and Patrizia D'Ettorre "REPRODUCTIVE CONFLICT IN SOCIAL INSECTS: MALE PRODUCTION BY WORKERS IN A SLAVE-MAKING ANT," Evolution 59(11), 2480-2482, (1 November 2005). https://doi.org/10.1554/05-260.1
Received: 9 May 2005; Accepted: 10 August 2005; Published: 1 November 2005
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KEYWORDS
Kin conflict
reproductive conflict
slave-making ants
social insects
worker reproduction
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