To date very few studies have addressed the effects of inbreeding in social Hymenoptera, perhaps because the costs of inbreeding are generally considered marginal owing to male haploidy whereby recessive deleterious alleles are strongly exposed to selection in males. Here, we present one of the first studies on the effects of queen and worker homozygosity on colony performance. In a wild population of the ant Formica exsecta, the relative investment of single-queen colonies in sexual production decreased with increased worker homozygosity. This may either stem from increased homozygosity decreasing the likelihood of diploid brood to develop into queens or a lower efficiency of more homozygous workers at feeding larvae and thus a lower propo...
In polygynous (multiple queens per nest) colonies of social insects, queens can increase their repro...
Haplodiploidy is one of the most widespread mechanisms of sex determination in animals. In many Hyme...
Sib matings increase homozygosity and, hence, the frequency of detrimental phenotypes caused by rece...
Inbreeding can lead to the expression of deleterious recessive alleles and to a subsequent fitness r...
Reproductive division of labor and the coexistence of distinct castes are hallmarks of insect societ...
Multiple mating has been suggested to benefit social insect queens because high genetic variation wi...
Variation in queen number alters the genetic structure of social insect colonies, which in turn affe...
Multiple mating by social insect queens is a common phenomenon despite likely imposing substantial c...
Some populations of Pogonomyrmex harvester ants comprise genetically differentiated pairs of interbr...
Caste differentiation and reproductive division of labor are the hallmarks of insect societies. In a...
A key feature of social Hymenoptera is the division of labor in reproduction between one or a few fe...
Although workers might increase their inclusive fitness by favoring closer over more distant kin, ev...
Considerable attention has focused on why females of many species mate with several males. For socia...
In social Hymenoptera (ants, bees, and wasps), the number of males that mate with the same queen aff...
In social insects the number of queens per nest varies greatly. One of the proximate causes of this ...
In polygynous (multiple queens per nest) colonies of social insects, queens can increase their repro...
Haplodiploidy is one of the most widespread mechanisms of sex determination in animals. In many Hyme...
Sib matings increase homozygosity and, hence, the frequency of detrimental phenotypes caused by rece...
Inbreeding can lead to the expression of deleterious recessive alleles and to a subsequent fitness r...
Reproductive division of labor and the coexistence of distinct castes are hallmarks of insect societ...
Multiple mating has been suggested to benefit social insect queens because high genetic variation wi...
Variation in queen number alters the genetic structure of social insect colonies, which in turn affe...
Multiple mating by social insect queens is a common phenomenon despite likely imposing substantial c...
Some populations of Pogonomyrmex harvester ants comprise genetically differentiated pairs of interbr...
Caste differentiation and reproductive division of labor are the hallmarks of insect societies. In a...
A key feature of social Hymenoptera is the division of labor in reproduction between one or a few fe...
Although workers might increase their inclusive fitness by favoring closer over more distant kin, ev...
Considerable attention has focused on why females of many species mate with several males. For socia...
In social Hymenoptera (ants, bees, and wasps), the number of males that mate with the same queen aff...
In social insects the number of queens per nest varies greatly. One of the proximate causes of this ...
In polygynous (multiple queens per nest) colonies of social insects, queens can increase their repro...
Haplodiploidy is one of the most widespread mechanisms of sex determination in animals. In many Hyme...
Sib matings increase homozygosity and, hence, the frequency of detrimental phenotypes caused by rece...