Abstract

Eusocial insects offer a unique opportunity to analyze the evolution of body size differences between sexes in relation to social environment. The workers, being sterile females, are not subject to selection for reproductive function providing a natural control for parsing the effects of selection on reproductive function (i.e., sexual and fecundity selection) from other kinds of natural selection. Patterns of sexual size dimorphism (SSD) and testing of Rensch's rule controlling for phylogenetic effects were analyzed in the Meliponini or stingless bees. Theory predicts that queens may exhibit higher selection for fecundity in eusocial taxa, but contrary to this, we found mixed patterns of SSD in Meliponini. Non‐Melipona species generally have a female‐biased SSD, while all analyzed species of Melipona showed a male‐biased SSD, indicating that the direction and magnitude of the selective pressures do not operate in the same way for all members of this taxon. The phylogenetic regressions revealed that the rate of divergence has not differed between the two castes of females and the males, that is, stingless bees do not seem to follow Rensch's rule (a slope >1), adding this highly eusocial taxon to the various solitary insect taxa not conforming with it. Noteworthy, when Melipona was removed from the analysis, the phylogenetic regressions for the thorax width of males on queens had a slope significantly smaller than 1, suggesting that the evolutionary divergence has been larger in queens than males, and could be explained by stronger selection on female fecundity only in non‐Melipona species. Our results in the stingless bees question the classical explanation of female‐biased SSD via fecundity and provide a first evidence of a more complex determination of SSD in highly eusocial species. We suggest that in highly eusocial taxa, additional selection mechanisms, possibly related to individual and colonial interests, could influence the evolution of environmentally determined traits such as body size.

Highlights

  • Because species of the genus Melipona showed a different trend in the evolution of sexual size dimorphism (SSD) than the other bees, we performed another phylogenetic independent contrasts analyses excluding this genus in order to evaluate their relative weight in the evolutionary divergence of female and male size in the Tribe

  • We found that male‐biased SSD possibly evolved independently two times, in Melipona and Trichotrigona extranea (Figure 1)

  • Our results quantitatively confirm the existence of two different patterns of SSD in stingless bees, revealing the Meliponini as a taxon with mixed SSD

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Summary

Introduction

We analyzed the evolutionary divergence in body size and sexual size dimorphism among stingless bees compared with primitively social and solitary closer relatives using a series of allometric predictions tested by Cueva del Castillo and Fairbairn (2012) in bumblebees.

Results
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