Abstract
Termites, as social insects, have a complicated life cycle in which the colony breeding structure, that is the number of and origin of reproductives in a colony, can vary in relation to age and environmental factors. In this study, we used genetic methods to characterize the breeding structure of three species of Reticulitermes from three sites in northwest Arkansas and compared two habitats: undeveloped, forested sites and developed, agricultural sites. We found 57.1% of R. flavipes (Kollar) in northwest Arkansas (n = 28) were simple families, 39.3% were extended families and 3.6% were mixed families. Similarly, for R. hageni Banks (n = 23), we found 58.3% simple families, 33.3% extended families, and 8.3% mixed families. All of the R. virginicus (Banks) samples (n = 5) were simple families. For R. flavipes and R. hageni, the percentage of extended families is intermediate to southeastern and northern USA populations, corresponding to the intermediate seasonality and climate in Arkansas. The level of inbreeding in Arkansas, estimated via FIT, was relatively high and similar to northern populations of Reticulitermes. There were significantly more extended family colonies at the developed site compared to the two undeveloped sites which contained more simple family colonies. This difference may occur as a strategy to cope with sparse resources in urban environments or as a consequence of different abiotic factors.
Highlights
The complicated life style of termites prevents traditional research methods from adequately assessing aspects of their biology
For R. flavipes, there were seven unique 16S mtDNA haplotypes from the 28 samples
Variation in breeding structure has been observed in different species and populations the cause of this variation is unclear (Vargo & Husseneder, 2009)
Summary
The complicated life style of termites prevents traditional research methods from adequately assessing aspects of their biology. A Reticulitermes (Isoptera; Rhinotermitidae) subterranean termite colony is founded by a monogamous pair of winged alates, forming a simple family This pair can be replaced by secondary reproductive descended from the original founding pair, changing the breeding structure of the colony to an extended family (Vargo & Husseneder, 2009). Colonies can consist of cohabiting individuals from unrelated reproductives These are referred to as mixed families, likely caused by colony fusion (Matsuura & Nishida, 2001; Deheer & Vargo, 2004; Fisher et al, 2004). While this structure is nearly impossible to determine from collecting and censusing colonies in the field, microsatellite DNA genotyping methods have been developed (Vargo 2000; Dronnet et al, 2004) and applied to Reticulitermes termites, primarily along the East Coast of the USA and Europe (Vargo & Husseneder, 2009)
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