Worker reproduction in the ponerine ant Ophthalmopone berthoudi: an alternative form of eusocial organization
Abstract
Colonies of the ponerine Ophthalmopone berthoudi were collected throughout the year. The queen caste is absent. Dissection of large numbers of workers revealed that many of them (up to 100 in one nest) are inseminated and produce eggs. The ovaries are small and contain very few mature oocytes, indicating that there is a slow rate of egg-laying. Workers are produced throughout the year, and all are capable of becoming functional reproductives. However, only those that are sexually-attractive during the limited period of male activity become mated. Thus the percentages of mated laying workers (=gamergates) fluctuate seasonally (Fig. 2). Successive generations of gamergates do not overlap. Observation of nests in the field and in the laboratory indicated that gamergates were never active above ground. There is no aggression between them, and their numbers are not socially regulated. There are few interactions between gamergates and non-reproductive workers, and the former do not acquire more food during termite meals. The notion of parental oppression is undermined by the complete loss of the meen caste, while the nature of the breeding system of this ant leads to the prediction of low relatedness between nestmates.
- Publication:
-
Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology
- Pub Date:
- November 1985
- DOI:
- 10.1007/BF00299235
- Bibcode:
- 1985BEcoS..18...29P
- Keywords:
-
- Slow Rate;
- Complete Loss;
- Alternative Form;
- Successive Generation;
- Limited Period