Polyandry in the genus Apis, particularly Apis andreniformis
2000
Oldroyd, Benjamin P. | Clifton, Morag J. | Siriwat Wongsiri | Sylvester, H. Allen | Rinderer, Thomas E. | Crozier, Ross H.
Using four polymorphic microsatellite loci, we found that four Apis andreniformis queens collected in Thailand each mated at least 10-20 times, producing an average relatedness gww, of workers of 0.30+-0.007, and an average effective number of matings of 9.1+-2.2. The degrees of polyandry and intracolonial genetic relatedness in A. andreniformis are similar to those in A. mellifera, slightly more than in A. florea, and up to 6 times less than in A. dorsata. We argue that while presently favoured hypotheses for the evolution of polyandry in monogynous social insects may adequately explain the evolution of up to five or six matings, they are inadequate to explain the extreme polyandry (10-60 matings) observed in Apis. One alternative possibility is that colony fitness is a non-additive function of the fitness of individual subfamilies. Such behavioral over-dominance may mean that queen fitness is increased by high levels of polyandry, which increase the probability of desirable combinations of worker genotypes occurring in one colony. The special attributes of honey bees which may lead to behavioral over-dominance include colony aggregation (which may increase the incidence of disease), frequent long-distance migration.
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