Abstract

In social species, the presence of several reproductive individuals can generate conflict. In social insects, as queen number increases, individual oviposition rate may decrease because of direct and indirect behavioural and/or chemical interactions. Understanding the factors that mediate differences in queen fecundity should provide insight into the regulation and maintenance of highly polygynous insect societies, such as those of the invasive Argentine ant (Linepithema humile). In this study, we investigated (1) whether differences in the oviposition rates of Argentine ant queens exposed to polygynous conditions could result from interactions among them; (2) whether such differences in fecundity stemmed from differences in worker attention; and (3) whether polygynous conditions affected the cuticular hydrocarbon profiles of queens (CHCs). We found that differences in queen fecundity and CHC profiles observed under polygynous conditions disappeared when queens were exposed to monogynous conditions, suggesting some form of reproductive inhibition may exist when queens cohabit. These differences did not seem to arise from variation in worker attention because more fecund queens were not more attractive to workers. Levels of some CHCs were higher in more fecund queens. These CHCs are associated with greater queen productivity and survival. Our findings indicate that such compounds could be multifunctional queen pheromones.

Highlights

  • No dominance hierarchies among Argentine ant queens and that the marked variability in queen fecundity seen under polygynous conditions arose from intrinsic physiological differences among queens

  • The same queens did not differ in their mean oviposition rates under monogynous conditions (GLMM t­34 = − 1.03; p = 0.31; Cohen’s d = 0.028) (Fig. 2)

  • Our results indicate that some form of reproductive inhibition exists among nestmate queens in the Argentine ant

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Summary

Introduction

No dominance hierarchies among Argentine ant queens and that the marked variability in queen fecundity seen under polygynous conditions arose from intrinsic physiological differences among queens. In this study, we wished to determine whether there was evidence that differences in the oviposition rates of Argentine ant queens exposed to polygynous conditions could result from interactions among individuals, which would suggest that queens engage in a form of reproductive competition. We explored this question experimentally: we exposed queens to both polygynous and monogynous conditions and examined their oviposition rates and ovarian activity. It remains unclear why queens in polygynous colonies would refrain from laying eggs in the presence of nestmate ­queens[8]

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