scholarly journals Hormonal modulation of reproduction in Polistes fuscatus social wasps: Dual functions in both ovary development and sexual receptivity

2020 ◽  
Vol 120 ◽  
pp. 103972 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander Walton ◽  
James P. Tumulty ◽  
Amy L. Toth ◽  
Michael J. Sheehan
1985 ◽  
Vol 33 (1) ◽  
pp. 331-333 ◽  
Author(s):  
Janet Shellman-Reeve ◽  
George J. Gamboa

1987 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 125-128 ◽  
Author(s):  
George J. Gamboa ◽  
Jeff E. Klahn ◽  
Allan O. Parman ◽  
Ruth E. Ryan

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yang Wu ◽  
Salil S. Bidaye ◽  
David Mahringer

SummaryLatent neural circuitry in the female brain encoding male-like mating behaviors has been revealed in both mice and flies. InDrosophila, a key component of this circuitry consists of thedoublesex-expressing pC1 neurons, which were deemed to exist in both sexes and function based on the amount of cells being activated. Here, we identify pC1-alpha, a female-specific subtype of pC1, as responsible for inducing persistent male-like social behaviors in females. We demonstrate that activation of a single pC1-alpha neuron is sufficient for such induction in a position- and direction-selective manner, and activity of pC1-alpha neurons as a whole is indispensable for maintaining normal sexual receptivity. These dual functions of pC1-alpha may require different neurotransmission, with acetylcholine specifically required for the former but not the latter. Our findings suggest that pC1-alpha may be the female counterpart of male P1 due to their shared similarities in morphology, lineage, and social promoting function.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cintia Akemi Oi ◽  
Rafael Carvalho da Silva ◽  
Ian Stevens ◽  
Helena Mendes Ferreira ◽  
Fabio Santos Nascimento ◽  
...  

Abstract In social insects, it has been suggested that reproduction and the production of particular fertility-linked cuticular hydrocarbons (CHC) may be under shared juvenile hormone (JH) control, and this could have been key in predisposing such cues to later evolve into full-fledged queen pheromone signals. However, to date, only few studies have experimentally tested this “hormonal pleiotropy” hypothesis. Here, we formally test this hypothesis using data from four species of Polistine wasps, Polistes dominula, Polistes satan, Mischocyttarus metathoracicus, and Mischocyttarus cassununga, and experimental treatments with JH using the JH analogue methoprene and the anti-JH precocene. In line with reproduction being under JH control, our results show that across these four species, precocene significantly decreased ovary development when compared with both the acetone solvent-only control and the methoprene treatment. Consistent with the hormonal pleiotropy hypothesis, these effects on reproduction were further matched by subtle shifts in the CHC profiles, with univariate analyses showing that in P. dominula and P. satan the abundance of particular linear alkanes and mono-methylated alkanes were affected by ovary development and our hormonal treatments. The results indicate that in primitively eusocial wasps, and particularly in Polistes, reproduction and the production of some CHC cues are under joint JH control. We suggest that pleiotropic links between reproduction and the production of such hydrocarbon cues have been key enablers for the origin of true fertility and queen signals in more derived, advanced eusocial insects.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura Beani ◽  
Romano Dallai ◽  
Federico Cappa ◽  
Fabio Manfredini ◽  
Marco Zaccaroni ◽  
...  

AbstractIn social wasps, female lifespan depends on caste and colony tasks: workers usually live a few weeks while queens as long as 1 year. Polistes dominula paper wasps infected by the strepsipteran parasite Xenos vesparum avoid all colony tasks, cluster on vegetation where parasite dispersal and mating occur, hibernate and infect the next generation of wasp larvae. Here, we compared the survival rate of infected and uninfected wasp workers. Workers’ survival was significantly affected by parasite sex: two-third of workers parasitized by a X. vesparum female survived and overwintered like future queens did, while all workers infected by a X. vesparum male died during the summer, like uninfected workers that we used as controls. We measured a set of host and parasite traits possibly associated with the observed lifespan extension. Infected overwintering workers had larger fat bodies than infected workers that died in the summer, but they had similar body size and ovary development. Furthermore, we recorded a positive correlation between parasite and host body sizes. We hypothesize that the manipulation of worker’s longevity operated by X. vesparum enhances parasite’s fitness: if workers infected by a female overwinter, they can spread infective parasite larvae in the spring like parasitized gynes do, thus contributing to parasite transmission.


1998 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 217-223 ◽  
Author(s):  
D PINELLI ◽  
J DRAKE ◽  
M WILLIAMS ◽  
D CAVANAGH ◽  
J BECKER

1992 ◽  
Vol 85 (1) ◽  
pp. 69-76 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria-Jose Sanchez-Beltran ◽  
Juan Carbonell ◽  
Jose L. Garcia-Martinez ◽  
Isabel Lopez-Diaz

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