Toward greater realism in inclusive fitness models: the case of caste fate conflict in insect societies

Author:

Ferreira Helena Mendes1ORCID,Alves Denise Araujo2ORCID,Cool Lloyd13ORCID,Oi Cintia Akemi14ORCID,Oliveira Ricardo Caliari5ORCID,Wenseleers Tom1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, Laboratory of Socio-ecology and Social Evolution, Zoological Institute, KU Leuven , Leuven , Belgium

2. Department of Entomology and Acarology, Luiz de Queiroz College of Agriculture, University of São Paulo , Piracicaba , Brazil

3. Department of Biology, Center of Microbial and Plant Genetics, KU Leuven , Leuven , Belgium

4. Department of Genetics and Evolution, University College London , London , United Kingdom

5. Departament de Biologia Animal, de Biologia Vegetal i d’Ecologia—Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona , Bellaterra (Barcelona) , Spain

Abstract

Abstract In the field of social evolution, inclusive fitness theory has been successful in making a wide range of qualitative predictions on expected patterns of cooperation and conflict. Nevertheless, outside of sex ratio theory, inclusive fitness models that make accurate quantitative predictions remain relatively rare. Past models dealing with caste fate conflict in insect societies, for example, successfully predicted that if female larvae can control their own caste fate, an excess should opt to selfishly develop as queens. Available models, however, were unable to accurately predict levels of queen production observed in Melipona bees—a genus of stingless bees where caste is self-determined—as empirically observed levels of queen production are approximately two times lower than the theoretically predicted ones. Here, we show that this discrepancy can be resolved by explicitly deriving the colony-level cost of queen overproduction from a dynamic model of colony growth, requiring the incorporation of parameters of colony growth and demography, such as the per-capita rate at which new brood cells are built and provisioned, the percentage of the queen’s eggs that are female, costs linked with worker reproduction and worker mortality. Our revised model predicts queen overproduction to more severely impact colony productivity, resulting in an evolutionarily stable strategy that is approximately half that of the original model, and is shown to accurately predict actual levels of queen overproduction observed in different Melipona species. Altogether, this shows how inclusive fitness models can provide accurate quantitative predictions, provided that costs and benefits are modeled in sufficient detail and are measured precisely.

Funder

Research Foundation Flanders

Fonds Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek

State of São Paulo Research Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference58 articles.

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2. First discovery of a rare polygyne colony in the stingless bee Melipona quadrifasciata (Apidae, Meliponini);Alves,2011

3. Hamilton’s rule, gradual evolution, and the optimal (feedback) control of phenotypically plastic traits;Avila,2021

4. On some aspects of bionomics in Melipona bicolor bicolor Lepeletier (Hymenoptera, Apidae, Meliponinae);Bego;Revista Brasileira de Entomologia,1983

5. Behavioral interctions among queens of the polygynic stingless bee Melipona bicolor bicolor Lepeletier (Hymenoptera, Apidae);Bego;Brazilian Journal of Medical Biological Research,1989

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