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Differentiation in eusocial colonies

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Presentation on theme: "Differentiation in eusocial colonies"— Presentation transcript:

1 Differentiation in eusocial colonies
How bees differentiate into queen vs workers? Differential feeding Epigenetics – DNA methylation, 20+% of genes have differential expression in bees

2 Eusocial colony can be considered a “superorganism”-

3 Coordination of colony members can create remarkably complex structures
weaver ant nest honeybee hive inside a weaver ant nest

4 Leaf cutter ants

5 Queen termite pic of bee queen Queen bee Reproductives

6 Complexity in cooperation
Communication within colonies relies on chemical, tactile and visual signals Activities are coordinated without any centralized ‘overseer’ Queen signals only control new queen production

7 Queen control over queen rearing

8 Coordination comes from workers and external cues
leaf damage recruits carriers honeybee foragers dance to recruit more foragers high colony humidity, temperature increases worker fanning time to unload nectar indicates colony nutritional status ants following pygidial gland extract

9 Ant recruitment

10 Honeybee dance communication
Sound cues and dance provide information on distance and direction of food Honeybee communication

11 Honeybee dance communication
Controversy regarding true function of bee dances was resolved with use of robot bee Robot needed dance and sound to recruit foragers

12 Colony decision making
“Voting” for a new colony site Scouts communicate locations and site quality Eventually one dance wins out

13 Life in an ant colony… Text uses black garden ant as example:
Colony founding First generation of workers Eventual reproductive generation Death of queen How did species evolve to such eusociality? rB – C > 0

14 How does eusociality start?

15 Pathways to eusociality
1. Subsocial route (“staying at home”) supported by intermediately social Polistes wasps, hover wasps Like helpers at the nest species 2. Parasocial route (“sharing a nest”) supported by allodapine bees, some paper wasps, Like communal breeding groups

16 Subsocial route rB – C > 0 more likely Can involve parental manipulation or mutualism Solitary Parental Offspring Sterile care may stay castes

17 Subsocial route Halictid (sweat) bees have a range of sociality
In some spp, founding female lays an initial set of offspring that are ‘manipulated’ to be workers Indirect fitness can still be high when raising siblings and mom lays tons of eggs


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