Inbreeding and reproductive investment in the ant Formica exsecta.

Evolution

Department of Biological and Environmental sciences, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland.

Published: July 2011

AI Article Synopsis

  • Inbreeding in social animals can lead to reduced care and resources provided by inbred group members, impacting colony productivity.
  • In a study of the ant Formica exsecta, increased inbreeding was linked to decreased biomass production and fewer reproductive females (gynes), while male numbers remained stable, leading to a male-biased sex ratio.
  • The study suggests inbred workers are less effective at feeding larvae, resulting in smaller males and changes in sex ratios and caste fate among offspring, highlighting the unique impacts of social inbreeding depression in these insects.

Article Abstract

In social animals, inbreeding depression may manifest by compromising care or resources individuals receive from inbred group members. We studied the effects of worker inbreeding on colony productivity and investment in the ant Formica exsecta. The production of biomass decreased with increasing inbreeding, as did biomass produced per worker. Inbred colonies produced fewer gynes (unmated reproductive females), whereas the numbers of males remained unchanged. As a result, sex ratios showed increased male bias, and the fraction of workers increased among the diploid brood. Males raised in inbred colonies were smaller, whereas the weight of gynes remained unchanged. The results probably reflect a trade-off between number and quality of offspring, which is expected if the reproductive success of gynes is more dependent on their weight or condition than it is for males. As males are haploid (with the exception of abnormal diploid males produced in very low frequencies in this population), and therefore cannot be inbred themselves, the effect on their size must be mediated through the workers of the colony. We suggest the effects are caused by the inbred workers being less proficient in feeding the growing larvae. This represents a new kind of social inbreeding depression that may affect sex ratios as well as caste fate in social insects.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1558-5646.2011.01273.xDOI Listing

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