AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study analyzed the genetic factors influencing morphological traits in the castes of social wasp *Vespula maculifrons*, revealing weak genetic influences on caste variation and higher heritability in queen traits compared to worker traits.
  • - Despite expectations, the genetic architecture of traits exhibited similarities between queens and workers, and no significant relationship was found between caste dimorphism and correlation, challenging the idea of constraints due to genetic conflict.
  • - Overall, the results indicate that environmental differences largely drive phenotypic variation among castes, suggesting that past selection on caste phenotypes has shifted the emphasis towards environmental influences.

Article Abstract

Many species exhibit distinct phenotypic classes, such as sexes in dioecious species or castes in social species. The evolution of these classes is affected by the genetic architecture governing traits shared between phenotypes. However, estimates of the genetic and environmental factors contributing to phenotypic variation in distinct classes have rarely been examined. We studied the genetic architecture underlying morphological traits in phenotypic classes in the social wasp Vespula maculifrons. Our data revealed patriline effects on a few traits, indicating weak genetic influences on caste phenotypic variation. Interestingly, traits exhibited higher heritability in queens than workers. This result suggests that genetic variation has a stronger influence on trait variation in the queen caste than the worker caste, which is unexpected because queens typically experience direct selection. Moreover, estimates of heritability for traits were correlated between the castes, indicating that variability in trait size was governed by similar genetic architecture in the two castes. However, we failed to find evidence for a significant relationship between caste dimorphism and caste correlation, as would be expected if trait evolution was constrained by intralocus genetic conflict. Our analyses also uncovered variation in the allometric relationships for traits. These analyses suggested that worker traits were proportionally smaller than queen traits for most traits examined. Overall, our data provide evidence for a strong environmental and moderate genetic basis of trait variation among castes. Moreover, our results suggest that selection previously operated on caste phenotype in this species, and phenotypic variation is now governed primarily by environmental differences.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11286790PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41437-024-00701-5DOI Listing

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