Publication | Open Access
Conditional Manipulation of Sex Ratios by Ant Workers: A Test of Kin Selection Theory
278
Citations
25
References
1996
Year
Kin RecognitionFitnessEntomologySocial InsectSexual SelectionReproductive BiologyReproduction ResponseSocial SciencesGender StudiesPublic HealthSocial HymenopteraBehavioral SciencesSex DifferenceSexual BehaviorConditional ManipulationInclusive FitnessKin Selection TheoryBiologyAnt WorkersSocial BehaviorEvolutionary BiologySymbiosisInsect Social BehaviorAnimal BehaviorWorker-queen Conflict
Variable queen mating frequencies provide a unique opportunity to study the resolution of worker-queen conflict over sex ratio in social Hymenoptera, because the conflict is maximal in colonies headed by a singly mated queen and is weak or nonexistent in colonies headed by a multiply mated queen. In the wood ant Formica exsecta, workers in colonies with a singly mated queen, but not those in colonies with a multiply mated queen, altered the sex ratio of queen-laid eggs by eliminating males to preferentially raise queens. By this conditional response to queen mating frequency, workers enhance their inclusive fitness.
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