Workers of social Hymenoptera can usually produce male offspring, but rarely do so in the presence of a queen despite the potential individual fitness benefit. Various mechanisms have been hypothesized to regulate worker reproduction, including avoiding the colony-level cost of worker reproduction. However, firm quantitative evidence is lacking to support that hypothesis. Here, we accurately quantified this cost by studying an ant species (Diacamma sp.) in which worker reproduction is rare in the presence of the gamergate (the functional queen). A series of experiments to manipulate worker–gamergate contact revealed that short-term brood-production efficiency is not changed by the presence of worker reproduction. However, when workers repro...
The occurrence of multiple reproductives within an ant colony changes the balance between indirect f...
Pathogens are predicted to pose a particular threat to eusocial insects because infections can sprea...
The queens of eusocial ants, bees, and wasps only mate during a very brief period early in life to a...
Workers of social Hymenoptera can usually produce male offspring, but rarely do so in the presence o...
Reproductive cooperation confers benefits, but simultaneously creates conflicts among cooperators. Q...
The evolution of complex societies with obligate reproductive division of labour represents one of t...
The ubiquitous trade-off between survival and costly reproduction is one of the most fundamental con...
The evolutionary paradox of sex remains one of the major debates in evolutionary biology. The study ...
The ubiquitous trade-off between survival and costly reproduction is one of the most fundamental con...
In genetically diverse insect societies (polygynous or polyandrous queens), the production of new qu...
The partitioning of reproduction among individuals in communally breeding animals varies greatly amo...
Eusocial insects provide special opportunities to elucidate the evolution of ageing as queens have a...
The trade-off between reproduction and longevity is widespread among multicellular organisms. As an ...
Abstract In social hymenoptera, the reproductive division of labor is often linked to differences in...
The evolution of effectively sterile workers in the aculeate Hymenoptera (ants, bees and stinging wa...
The occurrence of multiple reproductives within an ant colony changes the balance between indirect f...
Pathogens are predicted to pose a particular threat to eusocial insects because infections can sprea...
The queens of eusocial ants, bees, and wasps only mate during a very brief period early in life to a...
Workers of social Hymenoptera can usually produce male offspring, but rarely do so in the presence o...
Reproductive cooperation confers benefits, but simultaneously creates conflicts among cooperators. Q...
The evolution of complex societies with obligate reproductive division of labour represents one of t...
The ubiquitous trade-off between survival and costly reproduction is one of the most fundamental con...
The evolutionary paradox of sex remains one of the major debates in evolutionary biology. The study ...
The ubiquitous trade-off between survival and costly reproduction is one of the most fundamental con...
In genetically diverse insect societies (polygynous or polyandrous queens), the production of new qu...
The partitioning of reproduction among individuals in communally breeding animals varies greatly amo...
Eusocial insects provide special opportunities to elucidate the evolution of ageing as queens have a...
The trade-off between reproduction and longevity is widespread among multicellular organisms. As an ...
Abstract In social hymenoptera, the reproductive division of labor is often linked to differences in...
The evolution of effectively sterile workers in the aculeate Hymenoptera (ants, bees and stinging wa...
The occurrence of multiple reproductives within an ant colony changes the balance between indirect f...
Pathogens are predicted to pose a particular threat to eusocial insects because infections can sprea...
The queens of eusocial ants, bees, and wasps only mate during a very brief period early in life to a...