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The eusocial insects: Isoptera: Termites Hymenoptera: Ants, bees, wasps.

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Presentation on theme: "The eusocial insects: Isoptera: Termites Hymenoptera: Ants, bees, wasps."— Presentation transcript:

1 The eusocial insects: Isoptera: Termites Hymenoptera: Ants, bees, wasps

2 Insect behavior has a strong genetic component. It often depends on simple external cues. However, there is some flexibility in workers’ behavior. Task allocation is often based on: environmental factors what others are doing.

3 Eusocial insects Many adults live together in a group Overlapping generations Cooperation among adults in nest- building, care of young Reproductive dominance Sterile castes (in some species) Division of labor

4 Two possible routes to sociality: Familial route: Staying home to help High r will permit extreme skew Parasocial route: Sharing a nest In both cases, sociality will be determined by ecological conditions.

5 Haplodiploidy Females develop from fertilized eggs, like birds and mammals. Males develop from unfertilized eggs. They have no father. When a male forms gametes, there is no meiosis, so all gametes are identical. Each of a male’s daughters receives identical sets of genes. Males cannot have sons.

6 Females develop from fertilized eggs, males from unfertilized eggs. Males have mothers, but no fathers. Males have daughters, but no sons FemaleMale gametes meiosis Male Female

7 Diploid species: Offspring receive ½ of genetic material from mother, ½ from father. Full siblings: (½ x ½)(from mother) + (½ x ½)(from father) = r = 0.5

8 Haplodiploid species: Father is haploid, so 50% of a female’s genome has 100% chance of being shared with her sister (i.e. is identical with her sister’s). Mother is diploid, so 50% of a female’s genome has a a 50% chance of being shared with her sister. r of sisters:.5 (from father) + (.5 x.5)(from mother) = 0.75

9 F Sister.5 1.0.5 A receives ½ of her alleles from her father. The probability that her sister shares them is 1.0. From mother:.5 x.5 =.25 r = 0.75 From father:.5 x 1.0 =.5 So r = 0.75 antbee Probability that 2 ant or bee sisters will share the same allele: A M

10 F M Sister.5 Brother to sister: Sister to brother: Brother.51.0 FM r = 0.25 Only 1 path, since males have no father r = 0.50 Sister Brother

11 Haplodiploid species: r to:FemaleMale Mother 0.50 1.00 Father 0.50 0 Sister 0.75 0.50 Brother 0.25 0.50 Son 0.50 0 Daughter 0.50 1.00

12 Conflicts: Between colonies Between queens Between workers and unrelated queens Between workers and their own queen (mother) - over sex ratio of offspring - over workers’ reproduction Between workers

13 0 5 1:1 investment 3:1 investment Ratio of investment in 21 species of ants Weight ratio (Female:Male)

14 Requirements of eusociality: Overlapping generations High effort expended in parental care Non-reproductive can aid in parental care Ecological pressures: Nest defense Low opportunity for young to disperse Need to cooperate to rear young

15 Haplodiploidy Haplodiploidy only predisposes individuals to be eusocial: Not all eusocial species are haplodiploid (e.g. termites, naked mole rats) Not all haplodiploid species are eusocial (e.g. many wasps)

16 Crucial determinant: Ecological factors. If a female can breed without help, she does better if her daughters also breed. Haplodiploidy helps to explain the maintenance of eusociality once it has arisen through ecological factors.


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