Worker Survival and Egg Production—But Not Transcriptional Activity—Respond to Queen Number in the Highly Polygynous, Invasive Ant Tapinoma magnum

Archive ouverte

Lenhart, Anna | Majoe, Megha | Selvi, Sibel | Colgan, Thomas, J | Libbrecht, Romain | Foitzik, Susanne

Edité par CCSD ; Wiley -

International audience. In social animals, reproductive activity and ageing are influenced by group composition. In monogynous (single‐queen) insect societies, queen presence affects worker fecundity and longevity, but less is known about worker responses to queen number variation in polygynous (multi‐queen) species or how queens age in these systems. We created queenless, one‐queen and two‐queen colonies of the invasive, polygynous ant Tapinoma magnum to examine the effect of queen number on worker survival, ovary and oocyte development, oxidative stress resistance and fat body gene expression. We also compared the fecundity and brain and fat body transcriptomes between young and old queens. Queenless workers experienced the highest mortality, contrasting with monogynous species, where queen removal typically extends lifespan. Workers lived longer and had more developing oocytes in their ovaries in single‐queen than in two‐queen colonies. Queen number did not directly affect oxidative stress resistance or fat body gene expression, though its effect on the latter differed between inside and outside workers. Furthermore, inside—likely younger—workers produced more oocytes, showed higher oxidative stress resistance and upregulated antioxidant genes compared to outside—likely older—workers. Minimal shifts in fecundity and gene expression of differently aged queens indicated their physiological stability. Our research highlights distinct caste‐ and tissue‐specific responses to varying queen numbers in workers of a highly polygynous species.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Task-specific odorant receptor expression in worker antennae indicates that sensory filters regulate division of labor in ants

Archive ouverte | Caminer, Marcel, A | CCSD

International audience. Division of labor (DOL) is a characteristic trait of insect societies, where tasks are generally performed by specialized individuals. Inside workers focus on brood or nest care, while others...

Queen loss increases worker survival in leaf-cutting ants under paraquat-induced oxidative stress

Archive ouverte | Majoe, Megha | CCSD

International audience. Longevity is traded off with fecundity in most solitary species, but the two traits are positively linked in social insects. In ants, the most fecund individuals (queens and kings) live longe...

Comparative transcriptomic analysis of the mechanisms underpinning ageing and fecundity in social insects

Archive ouverte | Korb, Judith | CCSD

International audience. The exceptional longevity of social insect queens despite their lifelong high fecundity remains poorly understood in ageing biology. To gain insights into the mechanisms that might underlie a...

Chargement des enrichissements...