Worker bees engage in ‘reproductive class war’ with queen
September 10th, 2009 - 2:50 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Sep 10 (ANI): All is not hunky-dory among the members of bee colonies, which are known for their cooperation. A new research has shown a conflict for reproduction between worker bees and their Queens, leading some workers to selfishly exploit the colony for their own needs.
The study focused on Melipona scutellaris, a Brazilian species of highly social stingless bees, found throughout the Atlantic rainforest. Colonies contain around 1,500 workers and are headed by one single-mated Queen.
Researchers led by Denise Alves, carried out a genetic study of nearly 600 males from 45 colonies to discover the parentage of the worker population.
Their results showed that 22.89 percent of Melipona scutellaris males are sons of the workers rather than the Queen, which demonstrated an on-going conflict for reproduction.
“Surprisingly our results show that over 80% of the worker’s sons had genotypes that were incompatible with them being the sons of the present queen. This demonstrates, for the first time, how workers continue this conflict by reproductively parasitizing the next-generation of the workforce for their own selfish benefit,” said Alves.
Worker bees are generally unable to mate, but are capable of laying unfertilised eggs which can develop into male offspring.
To assure dominance over reproduction the Queen often selectively eats any worker laid eggs. In some species other workers may eat the eggs of fellow workers in what is known as ‘worker policing’.
But despite these barriers there is much to gain for worker bees producing their own offspring, however the benefit is entirely for the individual and can be costly for the colony overall.
The team found that workers who reproduce could live as much as three times longer, meaning that reproducing workers have a life expectancy almost matching the Queen herself.
This added life expectancy could be because workers who reproduce do not usually carry out risky tasks such as foraging.
However as worker bees who are reproducing are not working, an increase in individual workers who reproduce puts the collective production of the colony in jeopardy, hence a queen-worker conflict over the production of males ensues.
To demonstrate this conflict the team studied the genotypes of worker and queen bees from 45 colonies.
If a male carried a genotype not present in either the mother queen or her mate, then it was clear the male was either the son of an invading bee or of a worker who superseded the Queen.
The team estimates 77.11 percent of the males were the queen’s sons, 4.34 percent were the sons of the workers derived from the current queen and 18.54 percent were the sons of workers derived from a previous, superseded queen.
“These results are the first explicit demonstration that conflict over male parentage in insect societies is not just played out between the queen and workers, but shows that the conflict may also spill over from one generation of workers to the other,” concluded Alves.
The study has been published in Molecular Ecology. (ANI)
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Tags: atlantic rainforest, bee colonies, brazilian species, class war, conflict, cooperation, dominance, fellow workers, genetic study, genotypes, life expectancy, male offspring, next generation, parentage, queen researchers, stingless bees, three times, unfertilised eggs, worker bees, workforce