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Geographic variation in the status signals of Polistes dominulus paper wasps
- Source :
- PLoS ONE, PLoS ONE, Vol 6, Iss 12, p e28173 (2011)
- Publication Year :
- 2011
-
Abstract
- Understanding intraspecific geographic variation in animal signals poses a challenging evolutionary problem. Studies addressing geographic variation typically focus on signals used in mate-choice, however, geographic variation in intrasexual signals involved in competition is also known to occur. In Polistes dominulus paper wasps, females have black facial spots that signal dominance: individuals wasps with more complex 'broken' facial patterns are better fighters and are avoided by rivals. Recent work suggests there is dramatic geographic variation in these visual signals of quality, though this variation has not been explicitly described or quantified. Here, we analyze variation in P. dominulus signals across six populations and explore how environmental conditions may account for this variation. Overall, we found substantial variation in facial pattern brokenness across populations and castes. Workers have less broken facial patterns than gynes and queens, which have similar facial patterns. Strepsipteran parasitism, body size and temperature are all correlated with the facial pattern variation, suggesting that developmental plasticity likely plays a key role in this variation. First, the extent of parasitism varies across populations and parasitized individuals have lower facial pattern brokenness than unparasitized individuals. Second, there is substantial variation in body size across populations and a weak but significant relationship between facial pattern brokenness and body size. Wasps from populations with smaller body size (e.g. Italy) tend to have less broken facial patterns than wasps from populations with larger body size (e.g. New York, USA). Third, there is an apparent association between facial patterns and climate, with wasp from cooler locations tending to have higher facial pattern brokenness than wasps from warmer locations. Additional experimental work testing the causes and consequences of facial pattern variation will be important, as geographic variation in signals has important consequences for the evolution of communication systems and social behavior.
- Subjects :
- Paper
Evolutionary Processes
Animal Evolution
Wasps
lcsh:Medicine
Parasitism
Geographic variation
Hierarchy, Social
Biology
Body size
Environment
Intraspecific competition
Behavioral Ecology
Animals
Body Size
Experimental work
Animal communication
Adaptation
lcsh:Science
Melanins
Hungary
Evolutionary Biology
Multidisciplinary
Polistes dominulus
Geography
Ecology
Animal Behavior
Pigmentation
lcsh:R
Staus signals
paper wasps
facial patterns
strepsiptera
Organismal Evolution
Animal Communication
Italy
Evolutionary biology
Evolutionary Ecology
Developmental plasticity
lcsh:Q
Female
Zoology
Entomology
Research Article
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 19326203
- Volume :
- 6
- Issue :
- 12
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- PloS one
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....50273f1ae9ad517275f8ffa730aec13b