Molecular signatures of alternative reproductive strategies in a facultatively social hover wasp

Author:

Taylor Benjamin A.12ORCID,Taylor Daisy3,Bodrug‐Schepers Alexandrina4,Câmara Ferreira Francisco5,Stralis‐Pavese Nancy4,Himmelbauer Heinz4,Guigó Roderic56,Reuter Max27,Sumner Seirian12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Biodiversity & Environment Research University College London London UK

2. Department of Genetics, Evolution & Environment University College London London UK

3. School of Biological Sciences University of Bristol Bristol UK

4. Department of Biotechnology University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Vienna Austria

5. Centre for Genomic Regulation Barcelona Institute of Science and Technology Barcelona Spain

6. Universitat Pompeu Fabra Barcelona Spain

7. Centre for Life's Origins and Evolution University College London London UK

Abstract

AbstractSocial insect reproductives and non‐reproductives represent ideal models with which to understand the expression and regulation of alternative phenotypes. Most research in this area has focused on the developmental regulation of reproductive phenotypes in obligately social taxa such as honey bees, while relatively few studies have addressed the molecular correlates of reproductive differentiation in species in which the division of reproductive labour is established only in plastic dominance hierarchies. To address this knowledge gap, we generate the first genome for any stenogastrine wasp and analyse brain transcriptomic data for non‐reproductives and reproductives of the facultatively social species Liostenogaster flavolineata, a representative of one of the simplest forms of social living. By experimentally manipulating the reproductive ‘queues’ exhibited by social colonies of this species, we show that reproductive division of labour in this species is associated with transcriptomic signatures that are more subtle and variable than those observed in social taxa in which colony living has become obligate; that variation in gene expression among non‐reproductives reflects their investment into foraging effort more than their social rank; and that genes associated with reproductive division of labour overlap to some extent with those underlying division of labour in the separate polistine origin of wasp sociality but only explain a small portion of overall variation in this trait. These results indicate that broad patterns of within‐colony transcriptomic differentiation in this species are similar to those in Polistinae but offer little support for the existence of a strongly conserved ‘toolkit’ for sociality.

Funder

Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council

Natural Environment Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference69 articles.

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4. Transcriptome and target DNA enrichment sequence data provide new insights into the phylogeny of vespid wasps (Hymenoptera: Aculeata: Vespidae)

5. Facial markings in the hover wasps: quality signals and familiar recognition cues in two species of Stenogastrinae

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