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No sex in fungus-farming ants or their crops
Authors:Anna G Himler  Eric J Caldera  Boris C Baer  Hermógenes Fernández-Marín  Ulrich G Mueller
Institution:1.Section of Integrative Biology, Patterson Laboratories, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX 78712, USA;2.School of Animal Biology and University of Western Australia, Crawley, Western Australia 6009, Australia;3.Department of Biology, University of Puerto Rico, San Juan, PR 00901, USA;4.Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Apartado 2072, Balboa-Ancon, Republic of Panamá
Abstract:Asexual reproduction imposes evolutionary handicaps on asexual species, rendering them prone to extinction, because asexual reproduction generates novel genotypes and purges deleterious mutations at lower rates than sexual reproduction. Here, we report the first case of complete asexuality in ants, the fungus-growing ant Mycocepurus smithii, where queens reproduce asexually but workers are sterile, which is doubly enigmatic because the clonal colonies of M. smithii also depend on clonal fungi for food. Degenerate female mating anatomy, extensive field and laboratory surveys, and DNA fingerprinting implicate complete asexuality in this widespread ant species. Maternally inherited bacteria (e.g. Wolbachia, Cardinium) and the fungal cultivars can be ruled out as agents inducing asexuality. M. smithii societies of clonal females provide a unique system to test theories of parent–offspring conflict and reproductive policing in social insects. Asexuality of both ant farmer and fungal crop challenges traditional views proposing that sexual farmer ants outpace coevolving sexual crop pathogens, and thus compensate for vulnerabilities of their asexual crops. Either the double asexuality of both farmer and crop may permit the host to fully exploit advantages of asexuality for unknown reasons or frequent switching between crops (symbiont reassociation) generates novel ant–fungus combinations, which may compensate for any evolutionary handicaps of asexuality in M. smithii.
Keywords:asexual  fungus-growing ants  symbiosis  Mycocepurus smithii  Wolbachia  thelytoky
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