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Genetic constraints on dishonesty and caste dimorphism in an ant

Holman, Luke; Linksvayer, Timothy A.; d�Ettorre, Patrizia

Authors

Timothy A. Linksvayer

Patrizia d�Ettorre



Abstract

The ultimate causes of honest signaling remain a subject of debate, with questions remaining over the relative importance of costs and constraints. Signal costs may make dishonesty prohibitively expensive, while genetic constraints could make it impossible. We investigated honest signaling using full-sib analysis and parent-offspring regression in the ant Lasius niger, in which queens produce a cuticular hydrocarbon-based pheromone that signals fertility and inhibits worker reproduction and aggression. We found multiple lines of evidence that cuticular hydrocarbon production is genetically correlated with oogenesis and that the queen pheromone 3-methylhentriacontane and other 3-methylalkanes have strong genetic links with fertility relative to other cuticular hydrocarbons. These genetic correlations may maintain honesty in the face of directional selection on signaling and explain the putatively widespread use of cuticular hydrocarbons in fertility signaling across the social insects. We also found evidence for a positive genetic correlation for fertility between the castes; that is, the most fertile queens produced especially fertile workers. These results highlight that intercaste genetic correlations could constrain the evolution of queen-worker dimorphism, such that worker reproduction may sometimes reflect a nonadaptive “caste load” rather than positively selected cheating.

Citation

Holman, L., Linksvayer, T. A., & d’Ettorre, P. (2013). Genetic constraints on dishonesty and caste dimorphism in an ant. American Naturalist, 181(2), 161-170. https://doi.org/10.1086/668828

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Sep 8, 2012
Online Publication Date Jan 8, 2013
Publication Date 2013-02
Deposit Date Mar 19, 2021
Journal American Naturalist
Print ISSN 0003-0147
Publisher University of Chicago Press
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 181
Issue 2
Pages 161-170
DOI https://doi.org/10.1086/668828
Keywords cuticular hydrocarbons, fertility signal, handicap, index, Lasius niger, queen pheromone
Public URL http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/Output/2722861