Literature DB >> 21155912

Persistence of the single lineage of transmissible 'social cancer' in an asexual ant.

S Dobata1, T Sasaki, H Mori, E Hasegawa, M Shimada, K Tsuji.   

Abstract

How cooperation can arise and persist, given the threat of cheating phenotypes, is a central problem in evolutionary biology, but the actual significance of cheating in natural populations is still poorly understood. Theories of social evolution predict that cheater lineages are evolutionarily short-lived. However, an exception comes from obligate socially parasitic species, some of which thought to have arisen as cheaters within cooperator colonies and then diverged through sympatric speciation. This process requires the cheater lineage to persist by avoiding rapid extinction that would result from the fact that the cheaters inflict fitness cost on their host. We examined whether this prerequisite is fulfilled, by estimating the persistence time of cheaters in a field population of the parthenogenetic ant Pristomyrmex punctatus. Population genetic analysis found that the cheaters belong to one monophyletic lineage which we infer has persisted for 200-9200 generations. We show that the cheaters migrate and are thus horizontally transmitted between colonies, a trait allowing the lineage to avoid rapid extinction with its host colony. Although horizontal transmission of disruptive cheaters has the potential to induce extinction of the entire population, such collapse is likely averted when there is spatially restricted migration in a structured population, a scenario that matches the observed isolation by distance pattern that we found. We compare our result with other examples of disruptive and horizontally transmissible cheater lineages in nature.
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 21155912     DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2010.04954.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Ecol        ISSN: 0962-1083            Impact factor:   6.185


  4 in total

1.  Public goods dilemma in asexual ant societies.

Authors:  Shigeto Dobata; Kazuki Tsuji
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2013-09-17       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  Genetic reincarnation of workers as queens in the Eastern honeybee Apis cerana.

Authors:  M J Holmes; K Tan; Z Wang; B P Oldroyd; M Beekman
Journal:  Heredity (Edinb)       Date:  2014-07-23       Impact factor: 3.821

3.  Transmissible cancer and the evolution of sex.

Authors:  Frédéric Thomas; Thomas Madsen; Mathieu Giraudeau; Dorothée Misse; Rodrigo Hamede; Orsolya Vincze; François Renaud; Benjamin Roche; Beata Ujvari
Journal:  PLoS Biol       Date:  2019-06-06       Impact factor: 8.029

4.  The conditional defector strategies can violate the most crucial supporting mechanisms of cooperation.

Authors:  Ahmed M Ibrahim
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-09-07       Impact factor: 4.996

  4 in total

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