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Dr. Ed Vargo, 919/513-2743 or ed_vargo@ncsu.edu August 14, 2001 Fire Ant Queens and Workers Negotiate Truce' on Colony Sex Ratio EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE TO 2 P.M. ET THURSDAY, AUG. 16
"This will cause people to think a little more about the role that queens have in societies like this, and to focus a little more on the mechanisms the queens use to exert control," Vargo said.
For decades, entomologists
have thought that the workers
in ant colonies all
female and all daughters
of the queen control
how many males are allowed
to live in the colony by
killing many of their brothers
while still larvae. Scientists
assumed the queen was simply
an egg-laying machine. They
were puzzled, though, that
the ratio of females to
males in some ant colonies
was not quite as high as
they would expect in a worker-dominated
society. The research by Vargo and his three European colleagues has found an explanation: The queen can, in fact, alter the sex ratio of her colony by limiting the number of female eggs she lays. "The queen and the workers are having a conflict, and in some circumstances the queens can exert more control, and in some circumstances the workers can exert more control," Vargo said. To examine the determination of sex ratios in social insect societies, the scientists studied colonies of fire ants (Solenopsis invicta) in Vargo's lab. Fire ants were the social insect of choice because they have only one queen per colony, and because their colonies tend to "specialize" in producing mostly male or mostly female offspring. The scientists switched queens from about a dozen female-producing colonies with queens from about a dozen male-specialist colonies. Originally female-specializing colonies almost immediately began producing mostly males, while the originally male-specialist colonies produced females. Within five to six weeks, the sex ratio of the queen's new colony was nearly identical to her original colony. "We
found that the sex ratio
of the queen in the original
colony followed the queen
to the new colony she was
transferred to," Vargo
said. "It completely
reversed the sex ratio in
that new colony, but stayed
the same for the queen." The root of the power struggle between queens and workers results from the different interests they have in raising new members of the colony. Both as a result of evolutionary pressures are interested in ensuring the survival of their genes. The queen does this by producing new queens and male drones to mate with those queens, which will create new colonies. But males, which die after mating, are of no use to the female workers. "Because of the complex system of sex determination in ants and other social insects, it turns out that workers are more closely related to each other than they would be to their own offspring," Vargo explained. "Workers gain more by staying with their mother and working with their sisters than by going off on their own." On average, fire ant sisters share about 75 percent of the same genes. They share only one-half of their genes with their mother, and only about 25 percent with their brothers. So, it's in the evolutionary interest of the workers to maximize the number of sisters they have and minimize the number of brothers.
The queens have their gambit,
though: They can force their
daughters to raise male
young by overwhelming them
with male eggs. The workers
may selectively eliminate
some males, but won't kill
many of them, Vargo speculates,
because that would waste
too much of their colony's
limited resources. For example, it's in the interest of the queen to produce mostly males in an area where most of the other queens are producing breeding females, and vice versa. It's still a mystery, though, whether queens can change the number of breeding males and females they produce over time, and what genetic or ecological factors cause queens to have a bias toward producing either sex. Vargo's colleagues on the fire ant research are Dr. Luc Passera at the University Paul-Sabatier in France; Dr. Serge Aron at the Free University of Brussels, Belguim; and Dr. Laurent Keller at the University of Lausanne, Switzerland. - potter - Editor's note: A copy of the Science paper is available before 2 p.m. Aug. 16 by contacting Science at (202) 326-6440. After that, the paper is available by contacting Kevin Potter in News Services at 919/515-3470 or kevin_potter@ncsu.edu, or by contacting Dr. Ed Vargo at 919/513-2743 or ed_vargo@ncsu.edu. An abstract of the paper follows. "Queen
control of sex ratio in
fire ants" Abstract:
The haplodiploid sex-determination
system of ants gives rise
to conflict between queens
and workers over colony
sex ratios, and the female-biased
allocation ratios seen in
many species suggest that
workers often prevail in
this conflict. We exchanged
queens between male- and
female-specialist colonies
of the fire ant, Solenopsis
invicta. These exchanges
quickly reversed the sex-ratio
biases of adopting colonies.
In addition, the sex ratio
of queen-laid eggs differed
strongly between male- and
female-dominated colonies.
These findings suggest that
queens can force workers
to raise male sexuals by
limiting the number of female
brood, and may help to explain
why sex investment ratios
lie between the queen and
worker equilibria in this
and many other ant species.
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