Abstract

Social parasites exploit the brood-care behaviour and social structure of one or more host species. Within the social Hymenoptera there are different types of social parasitism. In its extreme form, species of obligate social parasites, or inquilines, do not have the worker caste and depend entirely on the workers of a host species to raise their reproductive offspring. The strict form of Emery's rule states that social parasites share immediate common ancestry with their hosts. Moreover, this rule has been linked with a sympatric origin of inquilines from their hosts. Here, we conduct phylogenetic analyses of yellowjackets and hornets based on 12 gene fragments and evaluate competing evolutionary scenarios to test Emery's rule. We find that inquilines, as well as facultative social parasites, are not the closest relatives of their hosts. Therefore, Emery's rule in its strict sense is rejected, suggesting that social parasites have not evolved sympatrically from their hosts in yellowjackets and hornets. However, the relaxed version of the rule is supported, as inquilines and their hosts belong to the same Dolichovespula clade. Furthermore, inquilinism has evolved only once in Dolichovespula.

Highlights

  • Social parasites exploit the brood-care behaviour and social structure of one or more host species

  • In contrast to the results of Carpenter & Perera [32], we find that the inquiline clade is not sister to D. sylvestris

  • Inquiline monophyly has been found in Polistes paper wasps [29,31]

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Summary

Introduction

Social parasites exploit the brood-care behaviour and social structure of one or more host species. The interspecific or social deception hypothesis claims that two species may evolve from geographically isolated populations (i.e. allopatrically) and parasitic habits develop when the populations come back together [1,12,22] In testing these two hypotheses, finding that social parasites and their hosts are sister taxa would be a necessary condition for invoking sympatric speciation, and lack of immediate common ancestry between social parasites and their hosts would be sufficient to rule out sympatric speciation. The obligate and facultative social parasites of Vespula were not sister to their respective hosts [32]

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