4.1 Article

Unusual behavior of polygyne fire ant queens on nuptial flights

Journal

JOURNAL OF INSECT BEHAVIOR
Volume 13, Issue 3, Pages 455-468

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1023/A:1007770404496

Keywords

Solenopsis invicta; polygyne; fire ants; monogyne; social insects

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This study reports previously undescribed behavior of fire ant queens (Solenopsis invicta) on their nuptial flights. We captured large numbers of alate twinged) queens flying at low altitudes in dense swarms that were virtually devoid of males. We assayed the genotypes of these alate queens at the locus Gp-9, which exhibits strong genotype frequency differences between monogyne (single-queen) and polygyne (multiple-queen) populations, and found that almost all of these low-flying queens originated from polygyne colonies. Comparisons of mtDNA haplotype distributions of these queens to those of alates leaving polygyne nests suggest that the flying queens had not dispersed more than a few hundred meters. Moreover, the proportion of flying queens that were mated did nor differ significantly from the proportion of reproductive queens that were mated within the same sites. Thus the flight behavior appears to occur subsequent to mating. We suggest that the flying queens are sampling the local environment in order to select a suitable landing site. Such a site would contain established polygyne nests into which the queens may be adopted as new reproductives.

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