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Genetic determination of female castes in a hybridogenetic desert ant.

Authors :
Darras, Hugo
Kuhn, Alexandre
Aron, Serge
Darras, Hugo
Kuhn, Alexandre
Aron, Serge
Source :
Journal of evolutionary biology, 27
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

In most social insects, the brood is totipotent and environmental factors determine whether a female egg will develop into a reproductive queen or a functionally sterile worker. However, genetic factors have been shown to affect the female's caste fate in a few ant species. The desert ant Cataglyphis hispanica reproduces by social hybridogenesis. All populations are characterized by the coexistence of two distinct genetic lineages. Queens are almost always found mated with a male of the alternate lineage than their own. Workers develop from hybrid crosses between the genetic lineages, whereas daughter queens are produced asexually via parthenogenesis. Here, we show that the association between genotype and caste in this species is maintained by a 'hard-wired' genetic caste determination system, whereby nonhybrid genomes have lost the ability to develop as workers. Genetic analyses reveal that, in a rare population with multiple-queen colonies, a significant proportion of nestmate queens are mated with males of their own lineage. These queens fail to produce worker offspring; they produce only purebred daughter queens by sexual reproduction. We discuss how the production of reproductive queens through sexual, intralineage crosses may favour the stability of social hybridogenesis in this species. Journal of Evolutionary Biology<br />SCOPUS: ar.j<br />FLWIN<br />info:eu-repo/semantics/published

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Journal of evolutionary biology, 27
Notes :
2 full-text file(s): application/pdf | application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn893989598
Document Type :
Electronic Resource