In some ant colonies, the queens aren't the only ones laying eggs. Workers sometimes lay eggs too, but their sisters "police" this behaviour by destroying their nephews! This "ant policing" could be of profound evolutionary importance. It's thought to have played a key role in the evolution of a sterile worker caste among the ants. Why lay eggs if they will be destroyed? There is another hypothesis for the evolution of worker sterility, however. According to the "monogamy" hypothesis, you don't need policing, queens just need to be monogamous. Monogamy ensures that workers are raising full siblings, the genetic equivalent of their own young. As workers can then pass on their genes indirectly through their mother, sterility can evolve.
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.