[Home]
[Full version]
Worker or queen? Harvester ant moms set daughters' fates
Feb 14 ,General Science
When it comes to deciding what harvester ant daughters will be when they grow up, mother queens hold considerable sway, according to a new study published online on February 14th in Current Biology, a publication of Cell Press. The researchers report evidence that eggs are predetermined to become workers or queens from the moment they are lain.
“In honeybees, food determines fate,” said Tanja Schwander of Simon Fraser University in Canada. Earlier studies showed that honeybee larvae had the capacity to become either workers or queens, depending upon what the young insects ate.
“Although it had never been shown experimentally, ants had been assumed to be more or less the same,” she added. “That’s the reason it was surprising to find a strong effect of mother queens.”
In nature, Pogonomyrmex harvester ants live in colonies that can be 10,000 to 12,000 strong, with each colony started by a single mother queen. Although workers and queens are all female, they differ considerably both anatomically and physiologically, said Schwander, who conducted most of the work while at the University of Lausanne in Switzerland.
Queens also have wings at the beginning of their life, which allow them to fly off and mate. Once mated, they settle down, lose their wings, and produce working daughters who will tend later broods. In early spring, the queens produce new queens and males. The males’ only job is to mate, after which they die.
Scientists had thought that a daughter’s “caste,” either worker or queen, was determined by a developmental switch during the larval stage controlled by nutritional and other environmental factors, meaning that eggs laid by females had the capacity to go either way. But Schwander’s team wanted to know whether queens had a say.
The trick to revealing mom’s role in the fate of their daughters, Schwander said, was to physically separate the place where the eggs were laid from where they were raised in the laboratory. By collecting eggs from one environment and transferring them to another, they disentangled the factors influencing eggs from those that act later.
They found that new queens are produced only from eggs laid by queens exposed to cold, as would typically occur during overwintering. Moreover, there was a strong age effect, with development into queens occurring only in eggs laid by queens that were at least two years old.
Biochemical analyses of eggs further revealed hormonal differences in eggs that developed into queens versus workers. By contrast, the researchers found no significant effect of colony size or the exposure of workers to cold, “suggesting that the trigger for caste differentiation may be largely independent of the quantity and quality of resources provided to larvae during development.”
“By allowing a precise timing of queen production, maternal effects on female caste determination may provide benefits in species where queens and males are produced only during a short period of the year,” the researchers concluded. “Whether ecdysteroids and/or other hormones may directly affect the pattern of gene expression and be responsible for a developmental switch remains to be investigated. Regardless of the mechanism used by queens to affect the developmental fate of their eggs, our study, together with the growing evidence of non-environmental factors affecting caste determination in other species, calls for a re-evaluation of the idea that the ant caste system is based solely on nutritional and social effects during the larval stage on gene expression and the developmental pathway of females.”
Source: Cell Press
Related stories:
A bee's future as queen or worker may rest with parasitic fly
(PhysOrg.com) -- Strange things are happening in the lowland tropical forests of Panama and Costa Rica. A tiny parasitic fly is affecting the social behavior of a nocturnal bee, helping to determine which individuals become queens and which become workers.
For honey bee queens, multiple mating makes a difference
The success of the “reign” of a honey bee queen appears to be determined to a large degree by the number of times she mates with drone bees.
Wasp genetics study suggests altruism evolved from maternal behavior
Researchers at the University of Illinois have used an innovative approach to reveal the molecular basis of altruistic behavior in wasps. The research team focused on the expression of behavior-related genes in Polistes metricus paper wasps, a species for which little genetic data was available when the study was begun. Their findings appear today online in
Science Express.
How drones find queens: Odorant receptor for queen pheromone identified
The mating ritual of the honey bee is a mysterious affair, occurring at dizzying heights in zones identifiable only to a queen and the horde of drones that court her. Now a research team led by the University of Illinois has identified an odorant receptor that allows male drones to find a queen in flight. The receptor, on the male antennae, can detect an available queen up to 60 meters away.
Researchers at Illinois explore queen bee longevity
The queen honey bee is genetically identical to the workers in her hive, but she lives 10 times longer and – unlike her sterile sisters – remains reproductively viable throughout life. A study from the University of Illinois sheds new light on the molecular mechanisms that account for this divergence. The study appears in the online edition of the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Why do some queen bees eat their worker bee's eggs?
Worker bees, wasps, and ants are often considered neuter. But in many species they are females with ovaries, who although unable to mate, can lay unfertilized eggs which turn into males if reared. For some species, such as bumble bees, this is the source of many of the males in the species. But in others, like the honeybee, workers "police" each other – killing eggs laid by workers or confronting egg-laying workers.
Worker Ants Store Fat To Share With Colony Members During Times Of Need
In a fascinating new study from the September/October 2006 issue of Physiological and Biochemical Zoology, Daniel A. Hahn (University of Florida) explores the ability of ants to store excess fat and pass it to colony members through lipid-rich oral secretions or unfertilized eggs.
Bees may transmit viruses to offspring
Researchers from the U.S. Department of Agriculture report what may be the first evidence of queen honeybees transmitting viruses to their offspring.
[Home]
[Full version]