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Selectable components of sex allocation in colonies of the honeybee (Apis mellifera L.)
Authors:Page, Robert E., Jr.
   Fondrk, M. Kim   Robinson, Gene E.
Affiliation:Department of Entomology, University of California Davis, CA 95616, USA Department of Entomology, University of Illinois Urbana, 1L 61801, USA
Abstract:Colonies of social insects that undergo fission as a componentof reproduction produce large excesses of males. Hypothesesto explain this phenomenon have assumed that the workers thatconstitute the entourage for the new queen (or queens) representinvestment in female reproductives. Selection for optimal colonysex allocation then leads to an increase in production of malesthat balances the investment in females based on their relativereproductive values. We show that the construction of comb dedicatedto the production of males (drone comb) versus workers (workercomb) is a component of sex investment under the control ofcolony workers. Relative comb construction was highly correlatedwith the relative investment in male and worker brood. Coloniesthat invested relatively more in their total numbers of malesinvested less in the dry weight of individual workers. Coloniesthat had more adult workers produced a greater number of malesand workers, but colony size did not affect the proportionalinvestment in drone comb or brood. Genetic variability was foundfor the number of adult workers in colonies, the amount of dronecomb produced, the amount of worker comb produced, and the dryweight of adult workers, suggesting that sex allocation is aselectable trait in honeybees.
Keywords:sex allocation   sex ratio   social insects   colony fission.
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