Abstract

Insect parental care strategies are particularly diverse, and prolonged association between parents and offspring may be a key precursor to the evolution of complex social traits. Macroevolutionary patterns remain obscure, however, due to the few rigorous phylogenetic analyses. The subsocial sphecid wasps are a useful group in which to study parental care because of the diverse range of strategies they exhibit. These strategies range from placing a single prey item in a pre-existing cavity to mass provisioning a pre-built nest, through to complex progressive provisioning where a female feeds larvae in different nests simultaneously as they grow. We show that this diversity stems from multiple independent transitions between states. The strategies we focus on were previously thought of in terms of a stepping-stone model in which complexity increases during evolution, ending with progressive provisioning which is a likely precursor to eusociality. We find that evolution has not always followed this model: reverse transitions are common, and the ancestral state is the most flexible rather than the simplest strategy. Progressive provisioning has evolved several times independently, but transitions away from it appear rare. We discuss the possibility that ancestral plasticity has played a role in the evolution of extended parental care.Significance statementParental care behaviour leads to prolonged associations between parents and offspring, which is thought to drive the evolution of social living. Despite the importance of insect parental care for shaping the evolution of sociality, relatively few studies have attempted to reconstruct how different strategies evolve in the insects. In this study, we use phylogenetic methods to reconstruct the evolution of the diverse parental care strategies exhibited by the subsocial digger wasps (Sphecidae). Contrary to expectations, we show that parental care in this group has not increased in complexity over evolutionary time. We find that the ancestral state is not the simplest, but may be the most flexible strategy. We suggest that this flexible ancestral strategy may have allowed rapid response to changing environmental conditions which might explain the diversity in parental care strategies that we see in the digger wasps today.

Highlights

  • Parents often invest resources to increase the fitness of their offspring, at a direct cost to their own future reproduction

  • If transitions can occur in either direction, there are 12 possible transitions between the four parental care states represented in our dataset

  • Model comparisons were based on the likelihood ratio test (LRT) and on Bayes Factor (BF) for ML and Bayesian models respectively

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Summary

Introduction

Parents often invest resources to increase the fitness of their offspring, at a direct cost to their own future reproduction. In frogs, increased investment in parental care is associated with a switch to terrestrial living (Vági et al 2019), and in Old world babblers, ground-nesting species have transitioned to building domed nests which offer greater protection (Hall et al 2015). While such studies do not always allow inferences to be made about the direction of causality (Wong et al 2013), they can help to guide more targeted empirical work

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