The queens of eusocial ants, bees, and wasps only mate during a very brief period early in life to acquire and store a lifetime supply of sperm. As sperm cannot be replenished, queens have to be highly economic when using stored sperm to fertilize eggs, especially in species with large and long-lived colonies. However, queen fertility has not been studied in detail, so that we have little understanding of how economic sperm use is in different species, and whether queens are able to influence their sperm use. This is surprising given that sperm use is a key factor of eusocial life, as it determines the fecundity and longevity of queens and therefore colony fitness. We quantified the number of sperm that honeybee (Apis mellifera) queens use ...
Data are presented concerning the reproduction in Bombini, Apini and Meliponini. 1-Melipona quadrifa...
Eusocial insect colonies are vulnerable to exploitation by egg-laying workers arising either as nata...
Workers of social Hymenoptera can usually produce male offspring, but rarely do so in the presence o...
The queens of eusocial ants, bees, and wasps only mate during a very brief period early in life to a...
Reproductive strategies can act as strong selective forces on reproductive traits of male insects, r...
The honey bee (Apis mellifera) is a eusocial insect where each individual hive contains a single, po...
The terminal investment hypothesis predicts that individuals will alter their reproductive investmen...
Worker honeybees, Apis mellifera, police each other’s reproduction by killing worker-laid eggs. Prev...
A honey bee queen mates on wing with an average of 12 males and stores their sperm to produce progen...
In many species, females store sperm between copulation and egg fertilization, but the consequences ...
Ant queens mate on a single occasion early in life and store millions of sperm cells in their sperma...
Reproduction by workers is rare in honey bee colonies that have an active queen. By not producing th...
Introduction Reproductive hierarchies are typical for insect societies. In the socially most advanc...
Queen honeybees (Apis mellifera) mate with a large number of drones on their nuptial flights. Not al...
Sperm usage was investigated in a naturally mated honey bee queen. We collected worker progeny arisi...
Data are presented concerning the reproduction in Bombini, Apini and Meliponini. 1-Melipona quadrifa...
Eusocial insect colonies are vulnerable to exploitation by egg-laying workers arising either as nata...
Workers of social Hymenoptera can usually produce male offspring, but rarely do so in the presence o...
The queens of eusocial ants, bees, and wasps only mate during a very brief period early in life to a...
Reproductive strategies can act as strong selective forces on reproductive traits of male insects, r...
The honey bee (Apis mellifera) is a eusocial insect where each individual hive contains a single, po...
The terminal investment hypothesis predicts that individuals will alter their reproductive investmen...
Worker honeybees, Apis mellifera, police each other’s reproduction by killing worker-laid eggs. Prev...
A honey bee queen mates on wing with an average of 12 males and stores their sperm to produce progen...
In many species, females store sperm between copulation and egg fertilization, but the consequences ...
Ant queens mate on a single occasion early in life and store millions of sperm cells in their sperma...
Reproduction by workers is rare in honey bee colonies that have an active queen. By not producing th...
Introduction Reproductive hierarchies are typical for insect societies. In the socially most advanc...
Queen honeybees (Apis mellifera) mate with a large number of drones on their nuptial flights. Not al...
Sperm usage was investigated in a naturally mated honey bee queen. We collected worker progeny arisi...
Data are presented concerning the reproduction in Bombini, Apini and Meliponini. 1-Melipona quadrifa...
Eusocial insect colonies are vulnerable to exploitation by egg-laying workers arising either as nata...
Workers of social Hymenoptera can usually produce male offspring, but rarely do so in the presence o...