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Chemical profiles of mated and virgin queens, egg-laying intermorphs and workers of the ant Crematogaster smithi
Authors:Oettler Jan  Schmitt Thomas  Herzner Gudrun  Heinze Jürgen
Affiliation:

aBiologie I, Universität Regensburg, 93040 Regensburg, Germany

bBiologie I, Universität Freiburg, 79104 Freiburg, Germany

Abstract:Many colonies of the North American ant Crematogaster smithi contain a “third female caste” in addition to queens and workers. These “intermorphs” are morphological intermediate of queens and workers and have well-developed ovaries but lack a spermatheca for the storage of sperm. They are specialised for laying large numbers of unfertilised, viable eggs, most of which serve as food for larvae and adults, though a few may eventually develop into males. Based on the assumption that cuticular hydrocarbons (CHCs) in social insects honestly signal the reproductive status of an individual we investigated the CHC of mated mature queens, virgin queens, intermorphs and workers. We expected intermorphs to show chemical profiles intermediate between those of mated queens and non-reproductive workers. A discriminant analysis of the chemical profiles reliably separated queens, virgin queens, and workers, but failed to distinguish between queens and intermorphs even though workers were apparently capable of doing so.
Keywords:Crematogaster smithi   Fertility signal   Intermorphs   Cuticular hydrocarbons
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