Genetic clusters and sex-biased gene flow in a unicolonial Formica ant.

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Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
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Publications
Institution
Title
Genetic clusters and sex-biased gene flow in a unicolonial Formica ant.
Journal
BMC Evolutionary Biology
Author(s)
Holzer B., Keller L., Chapuisat M.
ISSN
1471-2148[electronic], 1471-2148[linking]
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2009
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
9
Pages
69
Language
english
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Animal societies are diverse, ranging from small family-based groups to extraordinarily large social networks in which many unrelated individuals interact. At the extreme of this continuum, some ant species form unicolonial populations in which workers and queens can move among multiple interconnected nests without eliciting aggression. Although unicoloniality has been mostly studied in invasive ants, it also occurs in some native non-invasive species. Unicoloniality is commonly associated with very high queen number, which may result in levels of relatedness among nestmates being so low as to raise the question of the maintenance of altruism by kin selection in such systems. However, the actual relatedness among cooperating individuals critically depends on effective dispersal and the ensuing pattern of genetic structuring. In order to better understand the evolution of unicoloniality in native non-invasive ants, we investigated the fine-scale population genetic structure and gene flow in three unicolonial populations of the wood ant F. paralugubris. RESULTS: The analysis of geo-referenced microsatellite genotypes and mitochondrial haplotypes revealed the presence of cryptic clusters of genetically-differentiated nests in the three populations of F. paralugubris. Because of this spatial genetic heterogeneity, members of the same clusters were moderately but significantly related. The comparison of nuclear (microsatellite) and mitochondrial differentiation indicated that effective gene flow was male-biased in all populations. CONCLUSION: The three unicolonial populations exhibited male-biased and mostly local gene flow. The high number of queens per nest, exchanges among neighbouring nests and restricted long-distance gene flow resulted in large clusters of genetically similar nests. The positive relatedness among clustermates suggests that kin selection may still contribute to the maintenance of altruism in unicolonial populations if competition occurs among clusters.
Keywords
Animals, Ants/genetics, Behavior, Animal, Computational Biology, DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics, Gene Flow, Genes, Insect, Genetic Markers, Genetics, Population, Haplotypes, Male, Microsatellite Repeats, Polymorphism, Genetic, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Social Behavior
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
31/03/2009 11:13
Last modification date
20/08/2019 14:36
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