Wingless virgin queens assume helper roles in Acromyrmex leaf-cutting ants |
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Authors: | Volker Nehring Jacobus J Boomsma Patrizia d'Ettorre |
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Institution: | 1. Centre for Social Evolution, Department of Biology, University of Copenhagen, 2100 Copenhagen, Denmark;2. Biology I, University of Freiburg, Hauptstraße 1, 79104 Freiburg, Germany;3. Laboratoire d''Ethologie Expérimentale et Comparée (LEEC), Université Paris 13, 93430 Villetaneuse, France |
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Abstract: | Division of labour is the hallmark of advanced societies, because specialization carries major efficiency benefits in spite of costs owing to reduced individual flexibility 1]. The trade-off between efficiency and flexibility is expressed throughout the social insects, where facultative social species have small colonies and reversible caste roles and advanced eusocial species have permanently fixed queen and worker castes. This usually implies that queens irreversibly specialize on reproductive tasks 2]. Here, we report an exception to this rule by showing that virgin queens (gynes) of the advanced eusocial leaf-cutting ant Acromyrmex echinatior switch to carrying out worker tasks such as brood care and colony defence when they fail to mate and disperse. These behaviours allow them to obtain indirect fitness benefits (through assisting the reproduction of their mother) after their direct fitness options (their own reproduction) have become moot. We hypothesize that this flexibility could (re-)evolve secondarily because these ants only feed on fungal mycelium and thus could not benefit from cannibalising redundant gynes, and because queens have retained behavioural repertoires for foraging, nursing, and defense, which they naturally express during colony founding. |
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