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RAPD Markers Suggest Genotypic Effects on Forager Specialization in a Eusocial Wasp
Journal article   Peer reviewed

RAPD Markers Suggest Genotypic Effects on Forager Specialization in a Eusocial Wasp

Sean O'Donnell
Behavioral ecology and sociobiology, v 38(2), pp 83-88
1996

Abstract

Ants Behavioral genetics DNA Foraging Genetic variation Honey bee colonies Insect behavior Insect colonies Insect genetics Nectar
Genetic variability within insect societies may provide a mechanism for increasing behavioral diversity among workers, thereby augmenting colony efficiency or flexibility. In order to assess the possibility that division of labor has a genetic component in the eusocial wasp Polybia aequatorialis, I asked whether the genotypes of workers within colonies correlated with behavioral specialization. Workers specialized by foraging for one of the four materials (wood pulp, insect prey, nectar, or water) gathered by their colonies. I collected foragers on 2 days from each of three colonies and identified the material the foragers were carrying when collected. I produced random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) markers from the genomic DNA of these foragers and estimated genotypic similarity of foragers based on sharing of variable RAPD marker bands. Contingency tests on 20 variable loci per colony showed statistically significant (P < 0.05) biases in RAPD marker frequencies among forager types in the three colonies. Patterns of association of RAPD marker bands with specializations were constant in two colonies, but changed between collection days in one colony. RAPD marker biases suggest that division of labor among workers includes a genetic component in P. aequatorialis. Colony-level selection on variation in division of labor is a possible factor favoring the evolutionary maintenance of high genotypic variability (low relatedness) in epiponine wasp colonies and in other eusocial insects.

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Web of Science research areas
Behavioral Sciences
Ecology
Zoology
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