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Parental manipulation of offspring size in social groups: a test using paper wasps

机译:社会群体中后代大小的父母操纵:使用纸张的测试

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摘要

Maternal effects should be especially likely when mothers actively provision offspring with resources that influence offspring phenotype. In cooperatively breeding and eusocial taxa, there is potential for parents to strategically manipulate offspring phenotype in their own interests. Social insect queens are nearly always larger than their worker offspring, and queens could benefit by producing small daughter workers in several ways. If queens use aggression to dominate or coerce workers, a queen producing small workers might minimize potential conflict or competition from her offspring. In addition, because of the trade-off between the number of workers she is able to produce and their individual size, a queen may produce small workers to optimize colony work effort. In this study, we investigate why queens of the primitively eusocial paper wasp Polistes gallicus limit the size of their workers. We created queen-worker size mismatches by cross-fostering queens between nests. We then tested whether the queen-worker size difference affects worker foraging and reproductive effort, or the amount of aggression in the group. Some of our results were consistent with the idea that queens limit worker size strategically: small workers were no less successful foragers, so that producing a larger number of smaller workers may overall increase queen fitness. We found that queens were less likely to attack large workers, perhaps because attempting to coerce large workers is riskier. However, larger workers did not forage less, did not invest more in ovarian development, and were not more aggressive themselves. There was therefore little evidence overall that queens limit conflict by producing smaller workers.Significance statementIn social animals, parents might manipulate phenotypic traits of their offspring in their own interests. In paper wasps (Polistes), the first offspring produced are smaller than the queen and become workers: instead of founding their own nests, they stay and help their mother to rear new queens and males. We investigated whether P. gallicus queens could benefit by producing small daughter workers by using cross-fostering to create size mismatches between queens and their offspring. We then recorded foraging activity, reproductive effort, and aggression on nests. Queens were less likely to attack larger workers, but overall, there was limited evidence of size-based queen-worker conflict. However, because small workers were no less successful foragers, producing a larger number of smaller workers may optimize colony work effort.
机译:当母亲积极提供后代的资源时,孕产妇效应应特别可能是特别的。在合作繁殖和eusocial征集中,父母潜在潜力以自己的利益战略性地操纵后代表型。社会昆虫女王几乎总是比工人后代大,而皇后可以通过几种方式制作小女儿工人受益。如果女王使用侵略占主导地位或胁迫工人,那么一名女王生产小型工人可能会尽量减少她的后代的潜在冲突或竞争。此外,由于她能够生产的工人数量与个人规模之间的权衡,女王可能会产生小型工人来优化殖民地工作努力。在这项研究中,我们调查了原始Eusocial Paper Wasp Polistes Gallicus的Queens限制了其工人的规模。我们通过在巢之间的交叉培育女王创建了女王职业尺寸不匹配。然后,我们测试了女王职业规模差异是否会影响工作人员的觅食和生殖努力,或本集团的侵略金额。我们的一些结果与Queens限制工人规模战略性的想法一致:小型工人不太成功的觅食者,因此生产更大数量的较小工人可能会整体增加女王的健身。我们发现Queens不太可能攻击大型工人,也许是因为试图强迫大型工人是风险的。然而,较大的工人没有更少的饲料,没有投入更多的卵巢发展,并没有更具侵略性。因此,总体而言,总体而言,Queens通过制作较小的工人来限制冲突。尊严的声明素社会动物,父母可能会以自己的利益操纵其后代的表型特征。在造纸芥末(Polistes)中,所产生的第一个后代小于女王,成为工人:而不是创造自己的巢穴,他们留下来帮助他们的母亲将新的皇后和男性留下。我们调查了P. Gallicus Queens是否可以通过使用交叉培养来产生小女儿工人来利用小女儿,以在女王和后代之间产生尺寸不匹配。然后我们记录了巢穴的觅食活动,生殖努力和侵略。皇后队不太可能攻击更大的工人,但总体而言,基于规模的女王职工冲突的证据有限。然而,由于小型工人不太成功的觅食者,产生更多数量的较小工人可以优化殖民地工作努力。

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