Cuticular hydrocarbons correlated with reproductive status in a queenless ant

Citation
C. Peeters et al., Cuticular hydrocarbons correlated with reproductive status in a queenless ant, P ROY SOC B, 266(1426), 1999, pp. 1323-1327
Citations number
30
Categorie Soggetti
Experimental Biology
Journal title
PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF LONDON SERIES B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
ISSN journal
09628452 → ACNP
Volume
266
Issue
1426
Year of publication
1999
Pages
1323 - 1327
Database
ISI
SICI code
0962-8452(19990707)266:1426<1323:CHCWRS>2.0.ZU;2-V
Abstract
Reproductive division of labour is regulated behaviourally in social insect s lacking morphologically specialized castes. The directional nature of dom inance interactions shows that recognition occurs, but little is known abou t its basis. In the queenless ant Dinoponera quadriceps, the top worker in the hierarchy ('alpha') mates and produces offspring in each colony, while other workers remain virgin. Dominant ants frequently rub one antenna of su bordinates against their own cuticle, and alpha and infertile nest-mates co nsistently differ in their relative proportions of the cuticular hydrocarbo n 9-hentriacontene (9-C-31) The second-ranking 'beta' occasionally lays unf ertilized eggs and we show that she has less 9-C-31 than the alpha but more than infertile workers. To investigate further the link between 9-C-31 and ovarian activity, we experimentally removed alpha workers (n = 11 individu als) and used solid-phase microextraction (SPME) with gas chromatography to measure changes in 9-C-31 on live beta workers which attained alpha status . The proportion of 9-C-31 on the replacement alpha increased significantly after six weeks, in parallel with her gain in fecundity. We discuss whethe r 9-C-31 provides honest information about egg-laying ability enabling ants to recognize the different classes of nest-mates involved in reproductive conflicts. Such fertility cues could reliably underpin the antagonistic int eractions occurring in insect societies.