Abstract

Temperate-zone socially polymorphic sweat bees (Hymenoptera: Halictidae) are ideal model systems for elucidating the origins of eusociality, a major evolutionary transition. Bees express either social or solitary behaviour in different parts of their range, and social phenotype typically correlates with season length. Despite their obvious utility, however, socially polymorphic sweat bees have received relatively little attention with respect to understanding the origins of eusociality. Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) calceatum is a widespread sweat bee that is thought to be socially polymorphic, with important potential as an experimental model species. We first determined the social phenotype of L. calceatum at three sites located at different latitudes within the UK. We then investigated sociality in detail across two years at the southernmost site. We found that L. calceatum exhibits latitudinal social polymorphism within the UK; bees were solitary at our two northern sites but the majority of nests were social at our southern site. Sociality in the south was characterised by a relatively small mean of two and 3.5 workers per nest in each year, respectively, and a small to medium mean caste-size dimorphism of 6.6 %. Foundresses were smaller in our more northern and high altitude populations. Sociality is clearly less specialised than in some closely related obligately social species but probably more specialied than other polymorphic sweat bees. Our research provides a starting point for future experimental work to investigate mechanisms underlying social polymorphism in L. calceatum.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s00040-016-0473-3) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Understanding why an individual gives up its own reproduction to help others is a central goal of evolutionary biology (Maynard Smith and Szathmary 1995)

  • We found that L. calceatum exhibits latitudinal social polymorphism within the United Kingdom (UK); bees were solitary at our two northern sites but the majority of nests were social at our southern site

  • We investigate in detail the social phenotype of L. calceatum over 2 years at the southernmost site (Sussex)

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Summary

Introduction

Understanding why an individual gives up its own reproduction to help others is a central goal of evolutionary biology (Maynard Smith and Szathmary 1995). At least some first brood offspring are workers that help rear a second brood of reproductives. In contrast all offspring in solitary nests are reproductives, which tend to occur where the season is probably too short to complete the social life cycle (Hirata and Higashi 2008; Kocher et al 2014). Polymorphic sweat bee lineages offer unique opportunities to understand the mechanisms underlying the origin of eusociality, because it is possible to directly investigate the environmental and genetic processes mediating the decision to become a worker or a reproductive (Field et al 2010, 2012)

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