SOCIAL insect colonies are in many ways analogous to organisms1, becau
se kin-selected workers act selflessly and cohesively to promote the f
itness of a few reproductive members2,3. But workers can evolve selfis
h strategies which create reproductive conflict, reducing the function
al integrity of colonies. For example, they can lay unfertilized (male
) eggs3-6, compete directly with the queen to lay fertilized (female)
eggs7, suppress the reproduction of other workers8,9, choose among sev
eral queens10 and generally favour closer over more distant kin11. Con
flicts over the sex ratio may be especially pervasive, even in highly
eusocial insects. The unusually high relatedness (r = 3/4) of female h
ymenopteran workers to their full sisters means that workers should pr
efer more female-biased sex ratios than do queens4. The worker prefere
nce for females should be exerted most strongly on colonies where they
are most likely to be full sisters, leaving male production to coloni
es where this advantage least applies4,12-14; this prediction is suppo
rted by studies in ants and bees12,15-17. Here we show that when colon
ies have multiple queens born in the same nest, the selfish worker sex
-ratio strategy has a paradoxical side-effect which strongly promotes
social cohesion. This strategy accounts for the peculiar colony cycle
of epiponine wasps, and may be responsible for the maintenance of euso
ciality in this group.