In a recent study, Denny et al. (2004a) showed that queens of the army ant, Eciton burchellii, mate with multiple males and presented estimates suggesting that they mate with more males than queens of any other ant species so far investigated. They also inferred that data were consistent with queens being inseminated repeatedly throughout their life, which would be exceptional among the social Hymenoptera and contradictory to predictions from kin selection theory. In the present study, we reanalyze these data using new software and supplement them with similar microsatellite data from other colonies of the same species. Mating frequencies in E. burchellii are indeed very high (mean observed and effective queen-mating frequencies of 12.9 each) but considerably lower than the previous estimates. We show that the number of patrilines represented in the first worker offspring of a young queen is lower than in older queens but suggest that this may be due to initial sperm clumping in the queen's sperm storage organ, rather than to repeated inseminations. Moreover, we found no evidence for repeated mating by genotyping sequential worker generations produced by a single old queen, showing that she did not obtain new inseminations despite ample opportunities for mating.
Most species of social insects have singly mated queens, although there are notable exceptions. Competing hypotheses have been proposed to explain the evolution of high levels of multiple mating, but this issue is far from resolved. Here we use microsatellites to investigate mating frequency in the army ant Eciton burchellii and show that queens mate with an exceptionally large number of males, eclipsing all but one other social insect species for which data are available. In addition we present evidence that suggests that mating is serial, continuing throughout the lifetime of the queen. This is the first demonstration of serial mating among social hymenoptera. We propose that high paternity within colonies is most likely to have evolved to increase genetic diversity and to counter high pathogen and parasite loads.
The army ant Eciton hurchellii is a nomadic predator in the rain forests of Central and South America. Detailed work has documented many aspects of this species' ecology, behaviour and life history. However, a detailed investigation into within colony relatedness structure requires the development of genetic tools. Here we present eight microsatellite markers with between nine and 25 alíeles. For each loci there is close agreement between observed and expected heterozygosity.
Summary In the accepted model of lymphocyte intestinal homing, naïve T cells recirculate via organized lymphoid tissues, whilst induced effector/memory cells home to the intestinal mucosa. In order to assess the T‐cell‐receptor repertoire in the intestine and gut‐associated lymphoid tissue (GALT), spectratyping was performed on the proximal and the distal intestine, spleen and mesenteric lymph node tissue from six PVG rats. The products were analysed with an automated sequencer and statistical analyses were performed with hierarchical cluster analysis. This demonstrated the presence of a restricted T‐cell repertoire in the small intestine compared with that in the mesenteric lymph nodes and the spleen. It also demonstrated marked differences in repertoire between individual, fully inbred rats maintained under apparently identical conditions in the same cage and fed identical diets. In addition, this work demonstrated marked differences between repertoires in the proximal and the distal intestine. Such marked differences are likely to reflect the end result of increasing divergence over time produced by relatively subtle effects of environment and antigenic load. Equally, marked differences in repertoire between small intestinal segments within individual rats indicate selective recruitment or retention of specific clones, presumably antigen‐driven.
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