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Regulation of reproduction in polygynous ants (Dolichoderinae): queen fertility signal and adult polyploidy

Authors :
de Biseau D'Hauteville, Jean-Christophe
Detrain, Claire
Roisin, Yves
Lenoir, Alain
Aron, Serge
Cournault, Laurent
de Biseau D'Hauteville, Jean-Christophe
Detrain, Claire
Roisin, Yves
Lenoir, Alain
Aron, Serge
Cournault, Laurent
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

Regulation of reproduction is one central feature of social life. In particular, only a few individuals are in charge of producing offspring in eusocial species. This division of the reproductive labour is mainly mediated by pheromones emitted by the queens in social insects. These queen pheromones may signal the presence of a fertile queen so that workers react accordingly by taking care of her and not reproducing. Here I investigated two aspects of the reproduction of two polygynous ant species. The first one, Linepithema humile, is a unicolonial, highly polygynous and invasive species. It has been the focus of numerous studies about queen pheromones; in particular, it has been reported that queen cuticular hydrocarbons (CHC) profile is related to queen fertility. The other one, Tapinoma erraticum, is a multi-colonial, weakly polygynous and native species. Workers can lay haploid eggs in the absence of the queens which is impossible for Linepithema workers.The major part of my thesis dealt with the queen fertility signalling issue. In the first two chapters I demonstrate the link between queen fertility and queen pheromone output. I first study a queen releaser pheromone, the queen retrieval behaviour. This behaviour is performed by the workers who lay a chemical trail toward a queen located outside the nest. I successfully show this behaviour to be related to queen fertility, and not mating status, in L. humile and T. erraticum since only fertile queens (mated or not) induce such recruitment. I then highlight the role of queen fertility in the prevention of worker reproduction in T. erraticum. Again, mated fertile queens and unmated fertile queens are both able to induce such primer effect. In a third chapter I report that CHC profiles may discriminate female castes (workers, queens, virgin queens, and virgin egg-laying queens) in T. erraticum. Finally, chapter 4 summarizes my attempts to prove that CHC may be involved in queen retrieval or queen attr<br />Doctorat en Sciences<br />info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
1 v., 1 full-text file(s): application/msword, French
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn921616469
Document Type :
Electronic Resource