| Literature DB >> 25289189 |
Abstract
Queen pheromones are chemical signals produced by reproductive individuals in social insect colonies. In many species they are key to the maintenance of reproductive division of labor, with workers beginning to reproduce individually once the queen pheromone disappears. Recently, a queen pheromone that negatively affects worker fecundity was discovered in the bumblebee Bombus terrestris, presenting an exciting opportunity for comparisons with analogous queen pheromones in independently-evolved eusocial lineages such as honey bees, ants, wasps and termites. I set out to replicate this discovery and verify its reproducibility. Using blind, controlled experiments, I found that n-pentacosane (C25) does indeed negatively affect worker ovary development. Moreover, the pheromone affects both large and small workers, and applies to workers from large, mature colonies as well as young colonies. Given that C25 is readily available and that bumblebees are popular study organisms, I hope that this replication will encourage other researchers to tackle the many research questions enabled by the discovery of a queen pheromone.Entities:
Keywords: Bombus terrestris; Eusociality; Fertility signal; Reproducible research; Social insects
Year: 2014 PMID: 25289189 PMCID: PMC4184022 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.604
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Ovaries by treatment and size.
Treatment with n-pentacosane (C25) reduced the number of oocytes in the ovaries of queenless workers, and there was a strong positive effect of worker body size (note different y axes). The effect of C25 did not differ significantly between Large, Medium and Small workers. The violin plots show the kernel density estimate (i.e., estimated frequency: wide areas contain more data), and the scatter plot shows the raw data. The x coordinates of the raw data are arbitrary: the points were randomly “jittered” horizontally to make overlapping points visible.