Abstract
Male age may directly or indirectly affect the fitness of their female mating partners and their joint progeny. While in some taxa of insects, old males make better mates and fathers, young males excel in others. Males of most social Hymenoptera are relatively short lived and because of testis degeneration have only a limited sperm supply. In contrast, the wingless fighter males of the ant Cardiocondyla obscurior live for several weeks and produce sperm throughout their lives. Wingless males engage in lethal combat with rival males and the winner of such fights can monopolize mating with all female sexuals that emerge in their nests over a prolonged timespan. Here, we investigate if male age has an influence on sperm quality, the queen's lifespan and productivity, and the size and weight of their offspring. Queens mated to one‐week or six‐week‐old males did not differ in life expectancy and offspring production, but the daughters of young males were slightly heavier than those of old males. Our data suggest negligible reproductive senescence of C. obscurior males even at an age, which only few of them reach. This matches the reproductive strategy of Cardiocondyla ants, in which freshly emerging female sexuals rarely have the option to mate with males other than the one present in their natal nest.
Highlights
The age of a potential mating partner might constitute an important trait on which female choice is based
We investigated the impact of queen and male age on different traits by generalized linear models (GLMs) using R (R Development Core Team, 2015), starting with a full model (x = male age + queen age + male age: queen age) and removing factors without a sig‐ nificant influence
Parental age has a strong effect on reproductive performance and the fitness of their offspring. This does not ap‐ pear to be the case in the ant Cardiocondyla obscurior
Summary
The age of a potential mating partner might constitute an important trait on which female choice is based. Wingless males of many tropical species of Cardiocondyla engage in lethal fighting with rival males in their natal nest (Heinze, 2017; Kinomura & Yamauchi, 1987; Stuart, Francoeur, & Loiselle, 1987). The winners of such fights may monopolize mating with all female sexuals emerg‐ ing over many weeks. Given that colony fitness depends on the performance of the pres‐ ent male, we expected only a weak influence even of very old males on the fecundity and longevity of the queen and the quality of their offspring. Using two different age classes of queens in our experi‐ ment, we at the same time determined how a prolonged premating period affects reproductive performance
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