Data from: Royal Darwinian demons: enforced changes in reproductive efforts do not affect the life expectancy of ant queens
One of the central tenets of life-history theory is that organisms cannot simultaneously maximize all fitness components. This results in the fundamental trade-off between reproduction and life span known from numerous animals, including humans. Social insects are a well-known exception to this rule...
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Zusammenfassung: | One of the central tenets of life-history theory is that organisms cannot
simultaneously maximize all fitness components. This results in the
fundamental trade-off between reproduction and life span known from
numerous animals, including humans. Social insects are a well-known
exception to this rule: reproductive queens outlive nonreproductive
workers. Here, we take a step forward and show that under identical social
and environmental conditions the fecundity-longevity trade-off is absent
also within the queen caste. A change in reproduction did not alter life
expectancy, and even a strong enforced increase in reproductive efforts
did not reduce residual life span. Generally, egg-laying rate and life
span were positively correlated. Queens of perennial social insects thus
seem to maximize at the same time two fitness parameters that are normally
negatively correlated. Even though they are not immortal, they best
approach a hypothetical “Darwinian demon” in the animal kingdom. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.5c4rk |