Abstract

Nutrition is an important component of oogenesis and ovarian development in insects. In social insect colonies where a large proportion of females are sterile, suppression of reproduction caused by differential acquisition and retention of nutrition has been hypothesized to cause worker sterility. This study, using the primitively eusocial wasp Ropalidia marginata (Lepeletier) (Hymenoptera: Vespidae), show that worker ovarian development in naturally foraging colonies is more similar to experimentally food-limited colonies than to surplus-fed colonies, indicating nutritional castration in workers whose ovaries are inhibited by food availability. Further, experimental provisioning of surplus nutrition led to higher ovarian development in workers as compared to naturally foraging and food-limited workers. Surplus feeding also led to higher nest desertion by workers, leading to a breakdown of the colony’s social structure, whereas food-limited colonies retained workers.

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