| Literature DB >> 23251701 |
Boris Yagound1, Pierre Blacher, Stéphane Chameron, Nicolas Châline.
Abstract
Context-dependent decision-making conditions individual plasticity and is an integrant part of alternative reproductive strategies. In eusocial Hymenoptera (ants, bees and wasps), the discovery of worker reproductive parasitism recently challenged the view of workers as a homogeneous collective entity and stressed the need to consider them as autonomous units capable of elaborate choices which influence their fitness returns. The reproductive decisions of individual workers thus need to be investigated and taken into account to understand the regulation of reproduction in insect societies. However, we know virtually nothing about the proximate mechanisms at the basis of worker reproductive decisions. Here, we test the hypothesis that the capacity of workers to reproduce in foreign colonies lies in their ability to react differently according to the colonial context and whether this reaction is influenced by a particular internal state. Using the bumble bee Bombus terrestris, we show that workers exhibit an extremely high reproductive plasticity which is conditioned by the social context they experience. Fertile workers reintroduced into their mother colony reverted to sterility, as expected. On the contrary, a high level of ovary activity persisted in fertile workers introduced into a foreign nest, and this despite more frequent direct contacts with the queen and the brood than control workers. Foreign workers' reproductive decisions were not affected by the resident queen, their level of fertility being similar whether or not the queen was removed from the host colony. Workers' physiological state at the time of introduction is also of crucial importance, since infertile workers failed to develop a reproductive phenotype in a foreign nest. Therefore, both internal and environmental factors appear to condition individual reproductive strategies in this species, suggesting that more complex decision-making mechanisms are involved in the regulation of worker reproduction than previously thought.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23251701 PMCID: PMC3522577 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0052217
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Worker reproductive parasitism in eusocial species.
| Eusocial species | Type of WRP | Rate of WRP | Reference |
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| Intercolony parasitism in hopelessly queenless colonies | 5.5% |
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| Intercolony parasitism in hopelessly queenless colonies | 22.5% |
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| Intercolony parasitism in hopelessly queenless colonies | 7.7% |
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| Intercolony parasitism in queenright colonies | 6.4% |
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| Intercolony parasitism in queenright colonies | ? |
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| Intergenerational parasitism in queenright colonies | 18.5% |
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| Intercolony parasitism in queenright colonies | 6.7% |
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| Intercolony parasitism in queenright colonies | ? |
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| Intercolony parasitism in queenright colonies | 2.1% |
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| Interspecific parasitism in | ? |
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WRP, worker reproductive parasitism; ?, unknown.
In terms of proportion of parasite-worker-derived males.
These are queens and not males due to thelytokous parthenogenesis [7]. Parasite workers also invade colonies of the subspecies Apis mellifera scutellata, causing the death of the host colonies [4], [5].
These are queens and not males due to worker mating [10].
WRP has not yet been formally shown in this species but is likely to occur [13].
Figure 1Experimental design showing the consecutive groups that the bees encountered in the various conditions.
QL triads consisted of one focal bee and two one-day-old foreign bees. Behavioural observations occurred between days 10 and 17. QL, queenless. aIsolation did not concern introduced bees in the infertile foreign condition or resident bees in all conditions. bQueen removal in the host colony was performed in the foreign QL condition only.
Figure 2Ovarian development of control, resident and introduced bees in the various conditions.
Groups of five fertile or infertile bees were introduced into their mother colony or a foreign colony containing or lacking the queen. Resident bees were native workers from the host colony. Infertile control bees were randomly taken from non-manipulated colonies before the competition phase (see Materials and Methods). Fertile control bees were laying workers taken from triads of isolated workers. All workers were of the same age. The different letters denote statistical differences; each analysis (one-way ANOVA with the Monte Carlo procedure followed by post-hoc exact permutation tests corrected for multiple comparisons with the Bonferroni sequential method) is represented by uppercase or lowercase letters. Comparisons between resident and introduced bees for each condition were performed by exact permutation tests. QL, queenless; n.s., not significant; * p<0.05; ** p<0.01. Data are represented as mean ± standard error.
Behaviour and localization of the bees in the mother condition.
| Resident bees, | Introduced bees, |
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| 0.87±0.09 | 1.33±0.21 | 0.045 |
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| 7.75±1.60 | 6.43±1.09 | 0.55 |
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| 39.43±3.60 | 27.29±3.74 | 0.022 |
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| 9.72±2.43 | 16.02±2.94 | 0.07 |
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| 1.73±0.37 | 4.06±0.59 | 0.001 |
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| 23.99±2.50 | 20.87±2.04 | 0.34 |
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| 16.43±2.37 | 23.83±2.95 | 0.06 |
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| 42.53±4.36 | 49.67±5.03 | 0.29 |
Rate of antennation with the queen (per scan per bee), task allocation (percentage of scans) for all behavioural tasks recorded, and presence on the brood (percentage of scans) for resident and introduced bees in the mother condition. Rare activities (representing <1% of total acts) were excluded from the analysis (exact permutation tests). Data are presented as mean ± standard error.
Behaviour and localization of the bees in the foreign condition.
| Resident bees, | Introduced bees, |
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| 1.06±0.14 | 2.01±0.30 | 0.003 |
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| 6.61±0.75 | 9.36±1.35 | 0.08 |
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| 30.81±3.23 | 12.85±1.89 | <0.0001 |
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| 5.48±1.11 | 4.60±1.66 | 0.67 |
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| 1.88±0.41 | 4.12±0.62 | 0.003 |
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| 28.05±2.14 | 32.14±1.53 | 0.13 |
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| 24.89±2.39 | 33.76±2.22 | 0.009 |
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| 55.19±3.48 | 72.02±3.04 | 0.001 |
Rate of antennation with the queen (per scan per bee), task allocation (percentage of scans) for all behavioural tasks recorded, and presence on the brood (percentage of scans) for resident and introduced bees in the foreign condition. Rare activities (representing <1% of total acts) were excluded from the analysis (exact permutation tests). Data are presented as mean ± standard error.
Behaviour and localization of the bees in the infertile foreign condition.
| Resident bees, | Introduced bees, |
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| 1.09±0.13 | 1.59±0.22 | 0.050 |
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| 7.07±1.31 | 11.23±1.15 | 0.023 |
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| 43.71±3.26 | 22.96±2.05 | <0.0001 |
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| 3.34±1.07 | 5.99±1.53 | 0.16 |
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| 1.26±0.24 | 2.17±0.41 | 0.053 |
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| 25.86±1.47 | 25.89±1.72 | 0.99 |
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| 17.01±2.05 | 29.55±2.17 | <0.0001 |
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| 44.13±2.95 | 57.24±3.22 | 0.004 |
Rate of antennation with the queen (per scan per bee), task allocation (percentage of scans) for all behavioural tasks recorded, and presence on the brood (percentage of scans) for resident and introduced bees in the infertile foreign condition. Rare activities (representing <1% of total acts) were excluded from the analysis (exact permutation tests). Data are presented as mean ± standard error.