Sex allocation in fungus-growing ants: worker or queen control without symbiont-induced female bias

Oikos ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 117 (12) ◽  
pp. 1892-1906 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michiel B. Dijkstra ◽  
Jacobus J. Boomsma
1993 ◽  
Vol 341 (1296) ◽  
pp. 195-202 ◽  

Most theoretical work on brood sex ratio bias is based on life histories involving potential sibmating, where inseminated females colonize a habitat producing progeny that mate randomly among themselves. However, another type of life history can favour female biased broods; it involves motherson matings and is uniquely accessible to haplodiploids. Colonization is accomplished by immature stages (mating is postdispersal) and female bias is favoured at low colonization densities by the fact that, unlike isolated males, isolated females are not lost to the gene pool because they can mate with their parthenogenetically produced sons. We present a mathematical model of the life history including parameters describing colonization density, degree of aggregation, the penalty incurred when a female must wait to mate with her parthenogenetically produced son, and inbreeding. Low colonization density favours female bias as does increased aggregation; a high penalty associated with waiting for maturation of a son with which to mate means that some proportion of males among progeny will be favoured even at very low colonization densities. Life histories that fit the model are known in nematodes and mites.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Miyaguni ◽  
A. Agarie ◽  
K. Sugio ◽  
K. Tsuji ◽  
K. Kobayashi

AbstractSex allocation is one of the most studied traits in evolutionary biology because its theoretical predictions match the empirical data. Here, using the Ryukyu dry-wood termite Neotermes sugioi, we investigated several factors that could bias the sex allocation in three populations (Okinawa, Ishigaki/Iriomote, and Yonaguni). Our survey showed that there were more queen-only colonies than king-only colonies in these populations, suggesting a longer lifespan of the queens than that of the kings. In this condition, sex-asymmetric reproductive value (SRV) theory predicts female bias, because even after the short-lived kings die, the long-lived queens can continue reproduction with their sons. However, sex allocation in this species seemed to be biased toward males. Furthermore, we examined the possibility of intrasexual competition among siblings (ICS). If ICS is the cause of the bias, the allocation is expected to change depending on the total investment in sexual offspring. However, the biomass of both male and female alates increased linearly with the increase in the total biomass of the alates in these populations. Thus, neither the SRV nor the ICS theory could explain the male-biased sex ratio of N. sugioi. On the basis of these results, we discuss the remaining possibilities in this species.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Camille Roux ◽  
Charles Mullon ◽  
Samuel Neuenschwander ◽  
John R. Pannell

ABSTRACTSelection in inbreeding populations is expected to favour female-biased sex ratios in dioecious or gonochoristic species as a result of local mate competition, a prediction that finds strong support in populations in which females have control of the proportion of their sons versus daughters. Local mate competition due to inbreeding should also promote female-biased sex allocation in hermaphrodites, with reduced emphasis on the production of sperm or pollen relative to eggs, ovules or seeds. While inbreeding can be the direct result of the mating system in local populations, it can also result from demographic causes such as population turnover in metapopulations with frequent local extinction and recolonization. This effect of the turnover of demes has previously been analysed under the ‘haystack model’ for species with separate sexes. Here, we use quantitative genetic simulations to ask how population turnover affects the evolution of sex allocation in hermaphroditic metapopulations, and we assess the extent to which different genetic measures of inbreeding and population differentiation, especially FST and Jost’s D, predict the equilibrium sex allocation. We find that population turnover may dramatically enhance the female bias of hermaphroditic metapopulations, particularly where the inter-deme migration rate is low, even where local inbreeding, measured by FIS, is low or absent. In such situations, FST is a good predictor of the equilibrium sex allocation, and much better than Jost’s D. Our study extends predictions for sex allocation in subdivided populations that might experience population turnover to hermaphroditic species, and draws attention in general to the power of Wright’s hierarchical inbreeding statistics to predict the sex allocation in metapopulations at equilibrium.


2013 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 386-390
Author(s):  
Ge Xingyue ◽  
Zhu Biru ◽  
Liao Wanjin
Keyword(s):  

2002 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 320-322 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Villesen ◽  
P. J. Gertsch ◽  
J. J. Boomsma

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