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- Title
Sources of Variation in Cuticular Hydrocarbons in the Ant <i>Formica exsecta</i>.
- Authors
Martin, Stephen J.; Vitikainen, Emma; Shemilt, Sue; Drijfhout, Falko P.; Sundström, Liselotte
- Abstract
Phenotypic variation arises from interactions between genotype and environment, although how variation is produced and then maintained remains unclear. The discovery of the nest-mate recognition system in Formica exsecta ants has allowed phenotypic variation in chemical profiles to be quantified across a natural population of 83 colonies. We investigated if this variation was correlated or not with intrinsic (genetic relatedness), extrinsic (location, light, temperature), or social (queen number) factors. ( Z)-9-Alkenes and n-alkanes showed different patterns of variance: island (location) explained only 0.2 % of the variation in ( Z)-9-alkenes, but 21–29 % in n-alkanes, whereas colony of origin explained 96 % and 45–49 % of the variation in ( Z)-9-alkenes and n-alkanes, respectively. By contrast, within-colony variance of ( Z)-9-alkenes was 4 %, and 23–34 % in n-alkanes, supporting the function of the former as recognition cues. ( Z)-9-Alkene and n-alkane profiles were correlated with the genetic distance between colonies. Only n-alkane profiles diverged with increasing spatial distance. Sampling year explained a small (5 %), but significant, amount of the variation in the (Z)-9-alkenes, but there was no consistent directional trend. Polygynous colonies and populous monogynous colonies were dominated by a rich C 23:1 profile. We found no associations between worker size, mound exposure, or humidity, although effect sizes for the latter two factors were considerable. The results support the conjecture that genetic factors are the most likely source of between-colony variation in cuticular hydrocarbons.
- Subjects
HYDROCARBONS; ANIMAL variation; PHENOTYPES; GENOTYPE-environment interaction; CHEMICAL ecology; ALKANES; INSECTS
- Publication
Journal of Chemical Ecology, 2013, Vol 39, Issue 11/12, p1415
- ISSN
0098-0331
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s10886-013-0366-0