4.2 Article

The Pronotum of Worker of Camponotus borellii Emery (Hymenoptera: Formicidae): How Can It Affect Performance of the Head, Work Division, and Development of the Worker Caste?

Journal

NEOTROPICAL ENTOMOLOGY
Volume 50, Issue 1, Pages 78-89

Publisher

ENTOMOLOGICAL SOC BRASIL
DOI: 10.1007/s13744-020-00828-0

Keywords

Ants; allometry; Formicinae; geometric morphometrics

Categories

Funding

  1. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientificas y Tecnicas (CONICET)
  2. Agencia Nacional de Promocion Cientifica y Tecnologica [PICT 2013-2324]
  3. SCAIT [CIUNT: G638/2-PIUNT 2918]
  4. Instituto Superior de Entomologia Dr. Abraham Willink (INSUE)

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The study on Camponotus borellii workers revealed that the pronotum can be divided into two functional modules (neck and shield), providing insight into the factors influencing the polymorphic development of the worker caste. This information helps understand the relationship between pronotum and head functionally, as well as the division of labor and development within the worker caste.
In polymorphic ants, whose workers display continuous size distribution, each subcaste occupies a phenotypic space, usually with diffuse morphological boundaries. These morphological differences are closely associated to size by allometry although the environment also plays a key role that affects the fitness of the species. In Camponotus borellii Emery, the species selected as a study model, workers exhibit a continuous increase in size; geometric morphometric (GM) was used over four morphological traits: head capsule, clypeus, pronotum, and mesosoma, in order to assess (1) changes in shape, among the worker caste; (2) the influence of allometry on such changes; and (3) pronotum shape in respect to the head so as to infer which factors may influence the polymorphic development of the worker caste. The results indicated that the pronotum is organized into two highly integrated functional modules (neck and shield), corresponding to one developmental module. GM shows a similar pattern to that obtained for linear morphometry, though the worker ratio was different along continuous size distribution due to shape changes in two traits, with are also useful for delimiting modular units: (1) rounded shape of the posterior region of the head in minor workers; (2) shape of the pronotum, especially its anterior region, henceforth, neck, which widens as a consequence of the higher development of its central region, henceforth, shield, in major workers. The relevance of these results is discussed regarding functional morphology (pronotum in relation to the head), work division, and development of the worker caste.

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