Data from: Queen longevity and fecundity affect conflict with workers over resource inheritance in a social insect
Resource inheritance is a major source of conflict in animal societies. However, the assumptions and predictions of models of conflict over resource inheritance have not been systematically tested within a single system. We developed an inclusive fitness model for annual eusocial Hymenoptera that pr...
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Zusammenfassung: | Resource inheritance is a major source of conflict in animal societies.
However, the assumptions and predictions of models of conflict over
resource inheritance have not been systematically tested within a single
system. We developed an inclusive fitness model for annual eusocial
Hymenoptera that predicts a zone of conflict in which future reproductive
workers are selected to enforce nest inheritance before the queen is
selected to cede the nest. We experimentally tested key elements of this
model in the bumble bee Bombus terrestris. In colonies from which queens
were sequentially removed, queen tenure was significantly negatively
associated with worker male production, confirming that workers gain
direct fitness by usurping the queen. In unmanipulated colonies, queen
fecundity decreased significantly over the latter part of the colony
cycle, confirming that workers' indirect fitness from maintaining
queens declines over time. Finally, in an experiment simulating loss of
queen fecundity by removal of queens' eggs, worker-to-queen
aggression increased significantly and aggressive workers were
significantly more likely to become egg-layers, consistent with workers
monitoring queen fecundity to assess the net benefit of future
reproduction. Overall, by upholding key assumptions and predictions of the
model, our results provide novel empirical support for kin-selected
conflict over resource inheritance. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.84033r7 |