Periodic Reporting for period 1 - AntPolice (Relatedness and the Evolutionary Pathway to Worker Sterility in Ants)
Berichtszeitraum: 2023-09-01 bis 2025-09-30
AntPolice will test between these alternatives for the evolution of worker sterility by combining two approaches. First, ancestral states will be estimated to determine when in evolutionary time worker sterility evolved and if it was preceded by policing or monogamy (or both). Second, experiments with the ant Formica exsecta will be conducted to test if "ant policing" is good or bad for the colony.
Figuring this out is important. There is no test so far of the policing vs monogamy evolutionary routes to worker sterility. AntPolice will therefore fill a crucial gap in our knowledge about the origins of extreme cooperation. The results are potentially paradigm shifting as high relatedness is the currently the textbook explanation for the evolution of worker sterility.
Field work was conducted at Tvärminne zoological station where 15 colonies of the ant Formica exsecta were collected in the wild and the experiment set up in the lab. The experiment had the following design. Each colony was split into three parts:
1. 500 workers + 1 queen
2. 500 workers + 1 queen
3. 500 workers + 0 queens
This meant that 22500 individual ants were individually sorted! The third part is key. We trick workers into laying eggs by removing their queen. Once workers started laying eggs in the queenless colonies we combine workers from each colony to form a control and our treatment.
Control = 250 workers were swapped from part 2 into part 1
Treatment = 250 workers were swapped from part 3 into part 2
The control is so that we know swapping the workers itself doesn't have an effect. The treatment has egg laying workers, now with a queen. After a few weeks we compared the number of offspring produced by each colony. The results so far indicate that policing affects colony fitness.