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- Title
Sex ratio conflicts, mating frequency, and queen fitness in the ant Formica truncorum.
- Authors
Sundström, Liselotte; Ratnieks, L. W.
- Abstract
We examined the effect of facultative sex allocation by workers on queen fitness in a Furnish population of the ant Formica truncorum. Workers rear female-biased broods in colonies headed by a singly mated queen and male-biased broods in colonies headed by a multiply mated queen. As a result, multiply mated queens have a 37% fitness advantage over singly mated queens. Neither reproductive output nor worker population of colonies varied with queen mating frequency. We suggest that singly mated queens persist in the population because fitness benefits to multiply mated queens via sex allocation are balanced by costs of additional matings. Alternatively, singly mated queens may persist simply because some queens lack opportunities to mate multiply or because male control sometimes prevents additional matings by queens.
- Subjects
FORMICA (Insects); ANT reproduction; ANIMAL offspring sex ratio; ANIMAL sexual behavior; SEX allocation; QUEENS (Insects)
- Publication
Behavioral Ecology, 1998, Vol 9, Issue 2, p116
- ISSN
1045-2249
- Publication type
Article