Queen execution in a monogynous ant
收藏NIAID Data Ecosystem2026-03-13 收录
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http://datadryad.org/dataset/doi%253A10.5061%252Fdryad.f4qrfj6v6
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Workers in many species of social insects are capable of laying unfertilized eggs, which can develop into haploid males. This causes a conflict about male parentage between queens and workers. In a few species, this may result in matricide, i.e., workers kill the colony’s queen. Queen killing has so far been observed mainly in multi-queen colonies or in annual species, when the queen’s fecundity declines at the end of the reproductive period. Here, we report queen expulsion and matricide in a monogynous, monandrous ant with perennial societies. Workers were seen to aggressively expel both related and unrelated queens from their nest shortly after the end of hibernation. Queen expulsion and matricide led to a significant decrease in the number of workers and brood, but eventually increased the direct fitness of workers through significant male production. Long-term observations revealed a short lifespan of queens, while workers in orphaned colonies survived and produced male offspring over several years.
Methods
Collection of colonies and immediate census; information on the maternity of males and the relatedness between queens and workers was obtained by visually comparing the genotypes at up to six microsatellite loci.
创建时间:
2021-12-18



