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首页> 外文期刊>Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology >Resource abundance and sex allocation by queen and workers in the harvester ant, Messor pergandei
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Resource abundance and sex allocation by queen and workers in the harvester ant, Messor pergandei

机译:女王和工人在采蚁蚁Messor pergandei中的资源丰富度和性别分配

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摘要

The degree to which queens and workers control how limiting resources are split between reproductive males and females is central to the study of sex allocation in the eusocial Hymenoptera. We investigated the effect of resource availability on sex allocation decisions by both queens and workers in the ant Messor pergandei. We conducted the following field manipulations of resource availability: food supplementation while queens were laying reproductive brood (early-fed treatment), removal of workers while queens were laying reproductive brood (worker-removal treatment), food supplementation of colonies while workers were tending reproductive brood (late-fed treatment), and unmanipulated colonies (control). Early-fed colonies produced more alates and exhibited more strongly female-biased sex ratios than other treatments. Worker-removal colonies produced the fewest alates and the least female-biased sex ratios. Late-fed colonies yielded individual alates with the heaviest fresh masses (males and females) and dry masses (only females). Aside from worker-removal colonies, the sex and investment ratios of colonies in this study were significantly more female-biased than the relatedness asymmetries hypothesis under worker control would predict. Consistent with the multifaceted parental investment hypothesis, the timing of food supplementation relative to the reproductive cycle of the colony plays a prominent role in influencing sex allocation by both queens and workers. Early food supplements resulted in increased number of females, whereas late food supplements resulted in heavier individual females. Temporal dynamics of food availability may explain part of the tremendous inter-population variation in colony sex ratios seen in this and other ant species. Electronic supplementary material to this paper can be obtained by using the Springer LINK server located at http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/ s00265-002-0462-6.
机译:皇后和工人控制在繁殖的雄性和雌性之间如何分配有限的资源的程度,对于研究共面膜翅目中的性别分配至关重要。我们调查了蚁per的蚁后和女王的工作人员对性别分配决定的资源可用性的影响。我们对资源的可用性进行了以下野外操作:皇后铺设生殖育雏时进行食物补给(早期喂养治疗),皇后铺设生殖育雏时进行工作人员的撤除(工人撤走治疗),工人进行生殖保健时殖民地的食物补给。育雏(后期喂养)和未操纵的菌落(对照)。与其他治疗方法相比,早期喂养的菌落产生更多的a骨,并且表现出更强烈的女性偏向性别比。撤离工人的殖民地产生的骨灰少最少,女性偏见的性别比率最少。后期喂食的菌落产生了具有最重新鲜块体(雄性和雌性)和干燥块体(仅雌性)的个体a草。除了遣散工人的殖民地之外,在这项研究中,殖民地的性别和投资比例比在工人控制下的相关性不对称假设所预测的女性偏见要明显得多。与多方面的父母投资假说一致,相对于殖民地生殖周期而言,补充食物的时间在影响皇后和工人的性别分配中起着重要作用。早期食品补充剂导致女性数量增加,而后期食品补充剂导致女性个体数量增加。食物供应量的时间动态可能解释了这种蚂蚁和其他蚂蚁物种中菌落性别比的巨大种群间差异的部分原因。可以使用位于http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00265-002-0462-6的Springer LINK服务器获得本文的电子补充材料。

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