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- Title
Seasonal polydomy and unicoloniality in a polygynous population of the red wood antFormica truncorum.
- Authors
Elias, Marianne; Rosengren, Rainer; Sundström, Liselotte
- Abstract
Ant colonies may have a single or several reproductive queens (monogyny and polygyny, respectively). In polygynous colonies, colony reproduction may occur by budding, forming multinest, polydomous colonies. In most cases, budding leads to strong genetic structuring within populations, and positive relatedness among nestmates. However, in a few cases, polydomous populations may be unicolonial, with no structuring and intra-nest relatedness approaching zero. We investigated the spatial organisation and genetic structure of a polygynous, polydomous population ofFormica truncorumin Finland.F. truncorumshifts nest sites between hibernation and the reproductive season, which raises the following question: are colonies maintained as genetic entities throughout the seasons, or is the population unicolonial throughout the season? Using nest-specific marking and five microsatellite loci, we found a high degree of mixing between individuals of the population, and no evidence for a biologically significant genetic structuring. The nestmate relatedness was also indistinguishable from zero. Taken together, the results show that the population is unicolonial. In addition, we found that the population has undergone a recent bottleneck, suggesting that the entire population may have been founded by a very limited number of females. The precise causes for unicoloniality in this species remain open, but we discuss the potential influence of intra-specific competition, disintegration of recognition cues and the particular hibernation habits of this species.
- Subjects
FORMICA (Insects); REPRODUCTION; ANTS; FEMALES; GENETICS; LIFE (Biology)
- Publication
Behavioral Ecology & Sociobiology, 2005, Vol 57, Issue 4, p339
- ISSN
0340-5443
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s00265-004-0864-8