Litcius/Paper detail

Ant cuticular hydrocarbons are heritable and associated with variation in colony productivity

Justin Walsh, Luigi Pontieri, Patrizia d’Ettorre, Timothy A. Linksvayer

2020Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In social insects, cuticular hydrocarbons function in nest-mate recognition and also provide a waxy barrier against desiccation, but basic evolutionary features, including the heritability of hydrocarbon profiles and how they are shaped by natural selection are largely unknown. We used a new pharaoh ant ( Monomorium pharaonis ) laboratory mapping population to estimate the heritability of individual cuticular hydrocarbons, genetic correlations between hydrocarbons, and fitness consequences of phenotypic variation in the hydrocarbons. Individual hydrocarbons had low to moderate estimated heritability, indicating that some compounds provide more information about genetic relatedness and can also better respond to natural selection. Strong genetic correlations between compounds are likely to constrain independent evolutionary trajectories, which is expected, given that many hydrocarbons share biosynthetic pathways. Variation in cuticular hydrocarbons was associated with variation in colony productivity, with some hydrocarbons experiencing strong directional selection. Altogether, this study builds on our knowledge of the genetic architecture of the social insect hydrocarbon profile and indicates that hydrocarbon variation is shaped by natural selection.

Topics & Concepts

HeritabilityBiologyNatural selectionGenetic architectureGenetic variationEvolutionary biologySelection (genetic algorithm)Kin selectionPopulationNest (protein structural motif)Directional selectionEcologyGeneticsGenePhenotypeSociologyComputer scienceArtificial intelligenceBiochemistryDemographyInsect and Arachnid Ecology and BehaviorPlant and animal studiesInsect and Pesticide Research