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Sex ratio conflicts, mating frequency, and queen fitness in the ant Formica truncorum
Authors:Sundstrom  Liselotte; Ratnieks  L W
Institution:aDepartment of Genetics and Ecology, University of Aarhus DK-8000 Aarhus C, Denmark bDepartment of Animal and Plant Sciences, University of Sheffield Sheffield S10 2TN, UK
Abstract:We examined the effect of facultative sex allocation by workerson queen fitness in a Furnish population of the ant Formicatruncorum. Workers rear female-biased broods in colonies headedby a singly mated queen and male-biased broods in colonies headedby a multiply mated queen. As a result, multiply mated queenshave a 37% fitness advantage over singly mated queens. Neitherreproductive output nor worker population of colonies variedwith queen mating frequency. We suggest that singly mated queenspersist in the population because fitness benefits to multiplymated queens via sex allocation are balanced by costs of additionalmatings. Alternatively, singly mated queens may persist simplybecause some queens lack opportunities to mate multiply or becausemale control sometimes prevents additional matings by queens.
Keywords:eusociality  Formica  queen fitness  sex allocation  social insects  worker-queen conflict  
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