Artigo Acesso aberto Produção Nacional Revisado por pares

Mate number, kin selection and social conflicts in stingless bees and honeybees

1999; Royal Society; Volume: 266; Issue: 1417 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1098/rspb.1999.0648

ISSN

1471-2954

Autores

John Peters, David C. Queller, Vera Lùcia Imperatriz-Fonseca, David W. Roubik, Joan E. Strassmann,

Tópico(s)

Insect and Pesticide Research

Resumo

Microsatellite genotyping of workers from 13 species (ten genera) of stingless bees shows that genetic relatedness is very high. Workers are usually daughters of a single, singly mated queen. This observation, coupled with the multiple mating of honeybee queens, permits kin selection theory to account for many differences in the social biology of the two taxa. First, in contrast to honeybees, where workers are predicted to and do police each other's male production, stingless bee workers are predicted to compete directly with the queen for rights to produce males. This leads to behavioural and reproductive conflict during oviposition. Second, the risk that a daughter queen will attack the mother queen is higher in honeybees, as is the cost of such an attack to workers. This explains why stingless bees commonly have virgin queens in the nest, but honeybees do not. It also explains why in honeybees the mother queen leaves to found a new nest, while in stingless bees it is the daughter queen who leaves.

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