Queen-queen competition and reproductive skew in a cardiocondyla ant
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2007
Abstract
Queens and female sexuals of the Southeast Asian ant Cardiocondyla sp. engage in aggressive interactions. By biting and violently antennating female sexuals, queens appear to prevent them from shedding their wings and presumably also from starting to lay haploid eggs. Aggression among dealate queens apparently results in the establishment of reproductive rank orders with considerable differences in offspring production among individual nestmate queens, as visualized by the pronounced color polymorphism of this taxon. Reproductive skew ranged from complete monopolization of both worker and female sexual production to more or less equal partitioning of reproduction. Division of reproduction was associated with variation in the location of queens close to or away from the center of the brood pile, which again appeared to be caused by queen-queen antagonism.
Keywords
Reproductive skew, Queen fighting, Dominance, Color polymorphism, Solenopsis-invicta, Leptothorax-acervorum, Egg cannibalism, Social insects, Formicidae, Colonies, Hymenoptera, Dominance, Models, Behavior
Publication Title
Insectes Sociaux
ISSN
0020-1812
Recommended Citation
Hashim, Rosli; Heinze, J.; Yamauchi, K.; and Ishida, Y., "Queen-queen competition and reproductive skew in a cardiocondyla ant" (2007). Research Publications (2006 to 2010). 536.
https://knova.um.edu.my/research_publications_2006_2010/536
Divisions
InstituteofBiologicalSciences
Volume
54
Issue
3
Additional Information
Institute of Biological Sciences, Faculty of Science Building, University of Malaya, 50603 Kuala Lumpur, MALAYSIA