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Evolution of Caste-Specific Chemical Profiles in Halictid Bees
Authors:Iris Steitz  Callum Kingwell  Robert J. Paxton  Manfred Ayasse
Affiliation:1.Institute of Evolutionary Ecology and Conservation Genomics,University of Ulm,Ulm,Germany;2.Department of Neurobiology and Behavior,Cornell University,Ithaca,USA;3.Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute,Panama City,Panama;4.General Zoology, Institute for Biology, Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg,Halle (Saale),Germany;5.German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) Halle-Jena-Leipzig,Leipzig,Germany
Abstract:Chemical communication is crucial for the maintenance of colony organization in eusocial insects and chemical signals are known to mediate important aspects of their social life, including the regulation of reproduction. Sociality is therefore hypothesized to be accompanied by an increase in the complexity of chemical communication. However, little is known about the evolution of odor signals at the transition from solitary living to eusociality. Halictid bees are especially suitable models to study this question as they exhibit considerable variability in social behavior. Here we investigated whether the dissimilarities in cuticle chemical signals in females of different castes and life stages reflect the level of social complexity across halictid bee species. Our hypothesis was that species with a higher social behavior ergo obligate eusocial species possess a more distinct chemical profile between castes or female life stages. We analyzed cuticular chemical profiles of foundresses, breeding females and workers of ancestrally solitary species, facultative and obligate eusocial halictid species. We also tested whether social complexity was associated with a higher investment in chemical signals. Our results revealed higher chemical dissimilarity between castes in obligate than in facultative eusocial species, especially regarding macrocyclic lactones, which were the single common compound class overproduced in queens compared with workers. Chemical dissimilarities were independent of differences in ovarian status in obligate eusocial species but were dependent on ovarian status in facultative eusocial species, which we discuss in an evolutionary framework.
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