Polyandry may mitigate the negative impact of reproductive interference among bumblebees in Japan
In social hymenopterans, monandry of the queen is an ancestral trait, and polyandry is a derived trait. Polyandry of the queen is the norm in a limited number of lineages, such as honeybees, leaf-cutting ants, Pogonomyrmex ants, and Vespula wasps, which presumably provide fitness advantages for the...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Die Naturwissenschaften 2024-06, Vol.111 (3), p.31-31, Article 31 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | In social hymenopterans, monandry of the queen is an ancestral trait, and polyandry is a derived trait. Polyandry of the queen is the norm in a limited number of lineages, such as honeybees, leaf-cutting ants,
Pogonomyrmex
ants, and
Vespula
wasps, which presumably provide fitness advantages for the whole colony. The queen of the introduced bumblebee,
Bombus terrestris
, is polyandrous in Japan, whereas it is monandrous in native regions. We hypothesize that polyandry can evolve in a process that avoids the negative impacts of reproductive interference caused by interspecific mating and conducted genetic studies of the invasive species
B. terrestris
and two native subspecies,
Bombus hypocrita sapporoensis
and
Bombus hypocrita hypocrita
, in Japan. Our results revealed that although the native queens of
B. hypocrita hypocrita
allopatric with
B. terrestris
were strictly monandrous, the native queens of
B. hypocrita sapporoensis
sympatric with
B. terrestris
were polyandrous. These results suggested that the queens of native
B. hypocrita sapporoensis
do not experience negative impacts on interspecific mating from the invasive
B. terrestris
. We discuss the possibility that reproductive interference is a driving force in selection for multiple mating through an arms race between sympatric species. |
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ISSN: | 0028-1042 1432-1904 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00114-024-01917-5 |