Pre-imaginal biasing of caste in a primitively eusocial insect

Primitively eusocial insects often lack morphological caste differentiation, leading to considerable flexibility in the social and reproductive roles that the adult insects may adopt. Although this flexibility and its consequences for social organization have received much attention there has been r...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences Biological sciences, 1988-03, Vol.233 (1271), p.175-189
Hauptverfasser: Gadagkar, Raghavendra, Vinutha, C., Shanubhogue, Ashok, Gore, A. P.
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container_end_page 189
container_issue 1271
container_start_page 175
container_title Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences
container_volume 233
creator Gadagkar, Raghavendra
Vinutha, C.
Shanubhogue, Ashok
Gore, A. P.
description Primitively eusocial insects often lack morphological caste differentiation, leading to considerable flexibility in the social and reproductive roles that the adult insects may adopt. Although this flexibility and its consequences for social organization have received much attention there has been relatively little effort to detect any pre-imaginal effects leading to a bias in the potential caste of eclosing females. Experiments reported here show that only about 50 % of eclosing females of the tropical social wasp Ropalidia marginata build nests and lay eggs, in spite of being isolated from all conspecifics and being provided ad libitum food since eclosion. The number of empty cells in the parent nest, which we believe to be an indication of the queen’s declining influence, and a wasp’s own rate of feeding during adult life predict the probability of egg laying by eclosing females. These results call for an examination of the possibility that all females in primitively eusocial insect societies are not potentially capable of becoming egg layers and that reigning queens and possibly other adults exert an influence on the production of new queens.
doi_str_mv 10.1098/rspb.1988.0017
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ispartof Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences, 1988-03, Vol.233 (1271), p.175-189
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subjects Animal ethology
Animal nesting
Animals
Biological and medical sciences
Caste determination
Female animals
females
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Hymenoptera
Insect castes
Insect colonies
Insect eggs
Insect nests
Protozoa. Invertebrata
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Queen insects
reproduction
Ropalidia marginata
social differentiation
Social insects
title Pre-imaginal biasing of caste in a primitively eusocial insect
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