Abstract

Antennal cropping, a behavior inferred to exist because queens and kings have shorter antennae than fresh alates, is widespread in termites. However, the proximate and ultimate mechanisms underlying this phenomenon remain unclear. We studied the occurrence of antennal cropping in queens and kings of the dry-wood termite Neotermes koshunensis (Kalotermitidae). Observation of the antennal tip structure with scanning electron microscopy and the occurrence of antennal cropping in new kings and queens reared in isolation indicated that self-cropping is an important proximate mechanism. Previous studies inferred that antennal cropping may play a key role in the life-history of alates at the colony-founding stage. However, we also found antennal cropping in adultoid reproductives (secondary reproductives) that had not experienced a colony founding. We propose a new hypothesis that antennal cropping is important for individuals in regulating their physiology when they change from the non-reproducing to the reproducing phase.

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